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Wed, 30 Jun 2004 22:51:57 -0700 |
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I believe that while "blocking services" will prevent outside machines
from initiating connections to the internal machine, it doesn't do anything
to prevent replies to traffic initiated from the inside machine.
Your router may not have a way to do what you want, but you can prevent
the machine from initiating connections to the outside by statically
assigning its default gateway setting to point to an unused address in the
range you're using for the LAN. It will still be able to communicate with
the other local machines, just not anything that's beyond the router.
David Gillett
On 29 Jun 2004 at 22:47, [log in to unmask] wrote:
> I have a small network in my home: (3) Win98 comps and (1) WinXPPro linked
> through a netgear RP614v2 DSL router to the DSL modem. I'm trying to block
> all internet services to one particular computer whose IP ends in 6.
> In the router configuration I logged in as administrator, went to "Block
> Services"section and checked to block all services to IP 6, saved settings (it
> indicated it was updating the settings) and then exited out. That computer
> is still able to access the internet and instant messaging.
> I did winipcfg on that machine to verify the IP address was correct.
> However in that winipcfg screen it also showed PPP device. I'm guessing that is
> the Point to Point Protocol. But if I've blocked all services through the
> router, why would there still be internet access and IM's coming through?
> Anyone have any idea what I'm doing wrong?
>
> TIA,
> Kevin Nowicki
>
> Do you want to signoff PCBUILD or just change to
> Digest mode - visit our web site:
> http://freepctech.com/pcbuild.shtml
Do you want to signoff PCBUILD or just change to
Digest mode - visit our web site:
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