

- #BLACKLIST MAC ADDRESS MOTOROLA ROUTER HOW TO#
- #BLACKLIST MAC ADDRESS MOTOROLA ROUTER SOFTWARE#
- #BLACKLIST MAC ADDRESS MOTOROLA ROUTER PASSWORD#
It will be needed)ġ1: Select "Static Lease Type" and Apply >ġ2: Once you do this, you will see a New Option under Action for the Device. (Note: Write down or take a Screen Capture to record the MAC Address. This will open the DHCP Connection Settings page for the device. Once you hit Apply, you will return to the IPv4 Address Distribution page.ĩ: To manually enter an IP Address from the Static range you set up previously in the DHCP Pool, you will have to remove the existing device.ġ0: Select "Edit" under action for the device. You can block off a portion of these addresses to be used for specific Static IP Addresses.ĥ: As an example, if you change the Start IPv4 Address to 192.168.1.20, the following addresses 192.168.1.2 to 192.168.1.19 will be removed from the DHCP pool, and you can assign these at Static Addresses.Ħ: I would recommend changing the starting address-the End IPv4 Address of 192.168.1.254 is the actual last available address for this subnet.ħ: Now that you have the DHCP Pool setup, you will go back to the DHCP Lease listing. These are all the available IP Addresses the Router can use. This is the current setup for IP Addresses that DHCP will pull from automatically. You will have to edit the DHCP Settings for Network (Home/Office):Ĥ: You will see Start IPv4 Address and End IPv4 Address. If you want to assign a specific IP Address.
#BLACKLIST MAC ADDRESS MOTOROLA ROUTER HOW TO#
This process is unique for each device, but you can Google how to find it.Ħ: Select "Edit" under action for the device.ħ: If you want to keep the same IP Address, select "Static Lease Type" and Apply.Ĩ: Your device will now always have the same IP Address Fortunately, the MAC Address will always be unique for every device, and you can find the MAC address on the device. Note you must have connected with your device previously for it to be present.ĥ: Find device: This one might be tricky if you did not change the Host Name. To change existing device and assigned IP Address to a Static Address:Ģ: Under Routing, select IPv4 Address DistributionĤ: All of the devices that have connected to your network will be shown. Enter it and select OK>Ĥ: You will now be in the main area of the Router. There are several there you want to use, the one under Manage Router Settings.
#BLACKLIST MAC ADDRESS MOTOROLA ROUTER PASSWORD#
This password will be on a sticker on the router. If you are ok with the currently assigned IP Address for your device on the router, you can select "Edit" for the device in the DHCP Lease section and select "Static Lease Type." How do you do this:įirst, you have to login into your Router:ġ: Open a web browser and enter the address: 192.168.1.1ģ: You will have to enter the Password to access your router. This will not work, and you have to leave your device in DHCP mode. You would traditionally change your device to Static IP \ Use the Following IP Address and enter the information manually. This process is different than the usual way to do this.
#BLACKLIST MAC ADDRESS MOTOROLA ROUTER SOFTWARE#
The free open source software Hashcat or Hydra can brute force a password like: or in under two minutes.There is more to this if you want to assign specific Static IP Addresses. Last thing, a cheap and effective way to prevent unwanted access is to use a password that is very long and complex. Updating passwords, mac addresses, all kinds of things. These turds actually have a similar-to-google maps gps program that shows wireless ssid beacons that as a hobby they go around adding to it. We can never really eliminate the risk someone finaggles their way in, all we can do is raise the computational/time requirement. There are still very simple ways to get in, that are free. If you are mac filtering with blacklist/whitelist, I want everyone to understand that it is as false a sense of security as is locking your front door. So what I am trying to say is that if you just dont want people connecting to your wifi willy nilly, then mac filtering may keep them from doing so, may not. Then you use macchanger to change your wifi cards mac address into the one that has already authenticated with your ssid, kick them off, hop on, and have a cup of tea. With those open source tools it is really simple to watch a youtube video (cyber weapons lab) and learn how to use airodump-ng to sniff packets and find a mac address that has connected to your ssid (even if you have hidden it).

On free linux software, of course its free, you can download, for free, macchanger, and airodump-ng (Aircrack-ng).
