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Somebody Found Out My I.p Address And Where I Lived Through Teamspeak

How do I stop my TeamSpeak server IP address from changing so much? Why does it change?

I've ended up making a site (www.theknightsofwow.ne1.net) for my site that is mainly to tell people the new IP address of the teamspeak server for the guild on WoW (anyone is welcome if you play on Alexstrasza)


I want to know how to stop it, so I can stop fretting over changing the site over and over.

I also want to know why it changes, but thats secondary.


Thanks in advance.


If you think you can help me LIVE.

Please contact me :

Yahoo! Messenger : kylebayfield
MSN : kyle_bayfield@hotmail.com
AIM : ForbiddenEarth2
X-Fire : kylekills

How do I hide IP address while livestreaming?

Never use skype! dont even install it! even if you put yourself behind a vpn or proxy. Neither of these carry security unless you add it, even then most times you can bypass that and still grab the original ip. Skype resolvers will show every ip you've ever used to connect with skype. Honestly skype is kind of junk, how many times do you need to actually use video chat? Stick to Teamspeak.Never click on any link in chat or email from people you do not know! if you wouldn't trust the person to make them an admin on your own website or teamspeak, then why trust their links? If i really want your ip, i could grab a url that looks almost identical to say imgur or other site, change a single letter like the g to a q and use that to act like a trusted site, then view all the IP addresses that have viewed it. From there, simply look at where you're located or ask and figure out what IP is yours. A solution to this is tell them to tweet you the image, then not only do you have a safe location to view it, but also they may just follow your twitter.Do not, ever, for any reason, give people details you use for your own password recovery. Generally these security questions are so easy to snag, like where were you born. anyone could look at where i live on facebook or just ask me where i am, then do a lookup of hospitals within 50-100 mile radius then just start plugging away. Make up questions, or if that's not something you can do, make up a fake name/location/reply in the box. This goes a bit further but its added protection to keep your accounts safe.

Is your ip private on teamspeak?

When it comes to IP there are two choices...
1- Public IP (which is supplied by your ISP)
2- Private IP (obtained through your router)

Now - The fact is that if someone tells you they have your private IP - Laugh!! Laugh loud.
Why? Because thousands of other people also carry the same private IP - there are only three classes of private IP's = (A) 10.0.0.0 // (B) 172.16.0.0 // (C) 192.168.0.0

IPV4 uses a protocol called NAT
So when you go surfing on the internet - your router uses NAT.

Example:The source / destination packets have your IP as 192.168.1.5:35887

Now..If the Admin wanted to run a packet sniffer and grab your IP from the IP header they could...
how likely? slim to none. they dont have time to babysit the network
That's what IPS and IDS is doing

What does it mean when someone else is using your IP address?

If they are using it at the same time then they have hijacked you some way and your privacy is in trouble. if you however are using a host that assigns IP addresses dynamically then you wont have the same IP twice in a row and seeing someone else use it is not the same thing. If they assign a static IP address then you may have issues. You need to tell us, is this a IP address from your internet provider or a IP address on your private network. If a private network you still do not need to get upset since you can have people give themselves the same IP unknowingly. This will cause issues with your network for sure but is not a sign your hacked. More info please. Does your IP address in conflict begin with 192.168 or some other octaves?

What does "Ghosting IP Address" mean?

I am a CS player ...

Ghosting is where you tell someone who is on the same network as you, where players are in the game if you are dead.

Basically.. because you are on the same network, you both have the same IP address to the server. The server see's this, and to prevent you from ghosting.

From wikipedia:
"Killed players become "spectators" for the duration of the round; they cannot change their names until they spawn (come alive) again, text chat cannot be sent to or received from live players; and voice chat can only be received from live players and not sent to them (unless the cvar sv_alltalk is set to 1). Spectators are generally able to watch the rest of the round from multiple selectable views, although some servers disable some of these views to prevent dead players from relaying information about living players to their teammates through alternative media (most notably voice in the case of Internet cafes and Voice over IP programs such as TeamSpeak or Ventrilo). This technique is known as "ghosting"."

Will getting a new modem change my IP address?

NO.
=
Your ISP assigns a PUBLIC IP address when users come on-line.
- TEST: http://www.whatismyip.com
= Note IP address
- Reset Modem/Router
- - With a straightened paperclip, push the RESET button momentarily.
- Wait 60secs.
- TEST: http://www.whatismyip.com
= Note IP address
=
If IP address changed, your ISP uses Dynamic IP addressing.

What does it mean when my computer says someone is using my IP address?

WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT ITI see a lot of good answers here about the problem, but not a lot about how to keep this from happening again. There's at least 3 ways I've used on home routers of reasonable quality to address this issue. They are all similar ways to skin this particular cat.I'm pretty sure these aren't "Best Practices" implementations, but it might be helpful anyhow.1) Use the "Reserved Addresses" (or similar) function on your router to keep DHCP from assigning that address to your computer again and statically assign that address to the server or device that you came into conflict with. You won't get into an argument over this address again after that.2) Reassign the "DHCP Pool" in the DHCP server settings of the router to exclude a block of addresses which contains the contested address. Do not reduce the range or size of the subnet, however. (Hands off that subnet mask.) Now you can statically assign the addresses which have been excluded from the DHCP pool to a server, or printer, or other device that benefits from keeping its IP.3) Sit down and intelligently plan and document your IP addressing policy. Use either of these techniques if you like to aid you in executing your policy. With a little forethought and planning, you'll avoid this, and a hundred other little issues like it. This sounds pedantic, but it's important!I realize that some home routers simply don't have the features to allow you to use either of these approaches. Newer hardware is getting better about this these days. As some others have mentioned, sometimes cheap junky hardware will do this to you, and there's not much you can do about it besides retire the junk with extreme prejudice.Also, my reply may be beyond the scope of the question. If so, apologies.

Does our device get hacked through Omegle?

No, you can’t get hacked.Can your IP address get traced? Yes and No.If you’re in the video chat mode, then yes. Definitely will be able to get traced (IP Address..I.E they’ll know your location. If they have malicious intents they can just be douchebags and DDos you. But no one really wants to spend his $2 booter pack on a random person..atleast no 12 year old does.)If you’re in the normal chat mode, then you can feel semi-safe..unless you click any links or unless there are any exploits that I have yet to discover. For now, you’re pretty safe if you use the normal chat.The reason to that is because you do not connect directly to the person, when you chat..while when you are in a video chat, you’ll connect directly to them. When you’re in the normal chat you’re connecting to Omegle’s IP/Website to chat.So it goes through Omegle then delivers to you. While in Video Chat, it goes from them to you…IP Tracking/IP Sniffing programs or any packet analyzers/packet reviewers anything can track any incoming packets from any website/program. Now when you connect in a video chatting program…you’re basically that website that they’re connecting to. Which means they’ll be able to see “Okay. that IP belongs to: YOU” Because there is no website involved. IT’s just you.This happens a lot of the times in:Skype Video Chatting (NOT the normal chat though)Steam Voice Calls (NOT in the normal chat though)You get the drill. Though this doesn’t happen in Discord or TeamSpeak, though if you’re a server owner in TeamSpeak, you’ll be able to see user’s IP addresses.Discord is the safest of all. Because the server hosts your calls, not the person or anyone involved. It’s directly discord.Hope this helps! :)

If you're in charge of a network, can you see if someone's using a VPN? Can you see the IP address of the VPN server?

A network admin is going to see the VPN server IP as soon as you connect and can port mirror and sniff the traffic of pretty much whatever they want and will be able to determine if the traffic is encrypted just due to the fact that the payload of the packets will be complete garbage and most likely UDP packets.They also are going to be able to see you making connection attempts out of common VPN ports and maybe even note the IP addresses of common VPN providers/servers. You could setup your own VPN on Amazon’s cloud or some other host and tell it to listen for connections on port 80 or another common port to get away from a known used port of say 1194 with OpenVPN.Your IP address should show up publicly as whatever the VPN provider assigns to you, rest assured though even if your provider doesn’t keep logs you’ll get sold out if you are screwing around enough to attract government attention.I would only count on a VPN to encrypt your traffic past your ISP or for site to site traffic you don’t want seen. To truly go anonymous is actually pretty difficult.Edited for clarity. And to add, I don’t know what a sniffed VPN connection setup would look like at a packet level, so it may be much simpler to see than I’m aware of.

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