Quote from steve46:
Hello Corey:
Best I can do is point you in a direction that I hope is right. I believe that computers identify themselves with what is called a MAC address (medium acess control). This is an ID that is transmitted from the NIC when you communicate over the internet. If I am correct you need to find a way to block this. Unfortunately I don't know how to do it. The only other thing that might affect this is the IP (dynamic or static). Sorry I couldn't be more helpful. Perhaps a general search with google or a call to your local computer tech will solve the riddle. Good luck, Steve46
Quote from agrau:
I believe it's just your IP adress. Napster knows it and does a thing called "reverse name lookup" to see where the domain you belong to is physically located.
If I happen to be right about this, find some provider that allows anonymous surfing and is located in the US. This provider will hide your real IP and replaces it with his own. Maybe this solves your problem.
Best,
agrau
Quote from MrJohnGalt:
NOPE... NIC Address and MAC address are the same thing. They are an imprinted hardware # that the vendor issues, which has nothing to do with the geographical location. Usually, it goes starting with the vendor code... then the product and the individual ID #.
Quote from MrJohnGalt:
NOPE, again. IP Address itself has nothing to do with the location. I can take a US located IP Addressed network to any country and there would no problem with it's compatibility, just an static or dynamic update on the routers.
Quote from MrJohnGalt:
NOPE, again. IP Address itself has nothing to do with the location. I can take a US located IP Addressed network to any country and there would no problem with it's compatibility, just an static or dynamic update on the routers.