Seeing the same thing here.Yesterday I tried to open highdefforum (dot) com and was redirected to some DVDTalk website.
Anyone else experiencing this, what happened?
I wish I could use AVS forum, but I can’t. I was banned by the moderator because I had two accounts, one for my personal posts and one because by boss asked me to create a second account to help off air viewers. (At the time I was a chief engineer at a TV station. I am now retired.) I appealed to the moderator and was told that while my request was reasonable; too bad, two accounts are against their terms of service, and there were no exceptions.AVS Forum is much better
Tower Guy that is an outrage!! That is why I never see you in the Albany NY HD page anymore?I wish I could use AVS forum, but I can’t. I was banned by the moderator because I had two accounts, one for my personal posts and one because by boss asked me to create a second account to help off air viewers. (At the time I was a chief engineer at a TV station. I am now retired.) I appealed to the moderator and was told that while my request was reasonable; too bad, two accounts are against their terms of service, and there were no exceptions.
I tried a new account. The forum software seems to remember my MAC address or cookies and rejects it.
Delete your cookies for the site. Also, my Netgear Nighthawk router allows me to change the MAC address in SETUP, and I have done so. Yours likely also has that capability.
you might try a VPNI tried a new account. The forum software seems to remember my MAC address or cookies and rejects it.
Krell is absolutely correct MAC address do not pass through the Router. That is why we have IP addresses and routing.I thought the MAC address was specific to the LAN, and every datagram traversal through a layer 3 device (such as a router) changes it.
If I were him I wouldn't even consider a VPN. Why should he pay money to go to website that doesn't want him for ridiculous reasons. It's their loss not his...you might try a VPN
Krell is absolutely correct MAC address do not pass through the Router. That is why we have IP addresses and routing.
BUT, if you change the routers MAC address, your router then grabs a new IP address from your provider.
True, although my sis always found it easier to just unplug her router. And you are also right about not changing your MAC address if you have a static IP address. Every damn time I install a new router, I have to call Cox Business to get them to clear their ARP tables. And since I have a VoIP landline, I have to use my cell phone.
I can unplug my router any number of times, as long as you'd like, and it'll come right back up with the same IP address. Spectrum...
My sis had DSL from AT&T at her home in CA. And then when she was in SW VA she had another DSL provider I do not recall. You would never get the same IP address. The AT&T modem would get wildly different IP addresses that made me wonder how they could keep that network running at all. Is Spectrum a cable system? It is nice (to my way of thinking) to give you the same IP address even after power failures.