Author Topic: MD5 and Array  (Read 4705 times)

The script still can do that too and fake the IP.

The script still can do that too and fake the IP.
Yep, scripts can magically use TGE to trick the server into thinking he has [user here]'s IP and supply the user.

Didn't know that TGE could do it, but I was pointing at outside scripts/programs like in PHP or C++.

RTB verifies a user based on their Blockland ID and IP. Sure you can send a false ID but I have no idea how you're going to pull off faking the IP too, and without that the authentication will fail.

Do you understand yet?


The script can do the same thing by first checking the master server for IP and name and then checking an ID list to get the ID from that name. Finally you send authentication to RTB Connect API by sending both the acquired ID and the IP that belongs to it.

The script can do the same thing by first checking the master server for IP and name and then checking an ID list to get the ID from that name. Finally you send authentication to RTB Connect API by sending both the acquired ID and the IP that belongs to it.
How do you expect to spoof an IP?

Grrr

?

The script can do the same thing by first checking the master server for IP and name and then checking an ID list to get the ID from that name. Finally you send authentication to RTB Connect API by sending both the acquired ID and the IP that belongs to it.

The user does not send the IP, the IP that sent the HTTP request is used.
« Last Edit: March 02, 2010, 08:05:10 AM by Ephialtes »

And if the HTTP request is manually sent it could be setup to the requested IP. Although, a normal person wouldn't make something like this due of how long time it could take doing it. I rest my case.

And if the HTTP request is manually sent it could be setup to the requested IP. Although, a normal person wouldn't make something like this due of how long time it could take doing it. I rest my case.

?

An ip is not something you send to a server. You cannot say "by the way my ip is x.x.x.x" to a server - the internet does not work like that. You have no case, you're claiming that anyone can set their IP to anything. That's absurd.

Recommended Reading.
« Last Edit: March 02, 2010, 08:39:39 AM by Ephialtes »

Look at this and have fun.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i15BBf1mjec

Although, I don't have enough time finding the program, so I'll do that later today.

???

That just looks like a proxy or an internet anonymizer. There is a big difference between routing your internet usage through some random remote server and actually spoofing your own ip to match that of another computer on the internet.

Why do you keep trying to prove your point when you obviously don't know anything about networking? Give up already. :cookieMonster:
« Last Edit: March 02, 2010, 09:51:03 AM by Ephialtes »


This is getting so stupid. :cookieMonster:

Why have you given me a link to a Wikipedia article? It has nothing to do with what we're discussing here. What do you think is preventing hackers from "setting their IP" to Google's ip? Think about it for a minute haha.

I was referring to this:



Where you can change your IP header. Although, I'll step back now, not because of that this isn't possible to do, but that there would be a conflict having two identical IP's on the internet.