01-04-2013, 08:36 PM
(This post was last modified: 01-04-2013, 08:41 PM by modembricker.)
I see what you're saying but say for instance that a user is in "candyland" and can force configs and change macs just to get online and all the good pre-2011 stuff that people were able to do, how is it that the isp kills their forced config. There must be some sort of identification check of the config itself, no?
Specifically, that 50/5 cfg thast was floating around SBH, that was killed last October I believe. How did they do that? Was it as simple as changing the requirements of the configs, then issuing new cfg's to all users with these "new" requirements thus disabling those that did not meet these new requirements?
Specifically, that 50/5 cfg thast was floating around SBH, that was killed last October I believe. How did they do that? Was it as simple as changing the requirements of the configs, then issuing new cfg's to all users with these "new" requirements thus disabling those that did not meet these new requirements?