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I've heard about this happening and I couldn't believe it.
I don't even understand this from a networking perspective.. Your phone just becomes a router, forwarding requests, so from the ISP perspective it's still the same?
How do they even know?
They worked with OS developers, certainly. My phone says it's "verifying" for a sec before it fails.
Or we could ~~cut their cocks off~~ have a very nice chat with them about the ethics of taking advantage of consumers.
Is that actually it? So could software be written to just +1 TTL on incoming and -1 on outgoing packets and then problem solved?
You would need pretty low level access so that comes around to custom rom again..
You can spoof MACs so couldn't you spoof a IMEI as well? Theoretically speaking, not on your bog standard $2 ISP modem
Yes, I don’t know all the solutions but one would be using iptables in linux and mangling the packets to adjust ttl, “normal” ttl can vary by carrier though, and with many phones there is an extra hop to account for as the phone is a router. You should be able to tell from a ping or trace route whats “normal”, but nowadays with carrier grade nat, I think it gets messed up sometimes.
You can spoof inei information, but it appears difficult r/privacy thread on the topic.
That is a very old thread, I bet things are different than they were 8 years ago
That's some bullshit right there. Can you get around this with a custom rom?
"Yes but actually no." If they can get a custom ROM flashed, yes. But it's very likely everything is just locked down, so it's not an option.
EDIT: According to the other comments even that might not help. YMMV
Very likely. Even an unlocked phone without carrier bloatware is likely to work - f-droid might even have something to do it without rooting, or even something to access hidden settings and disable whatever bloatware or setting is blocking it
Back in college, we would use a hotspot on someone's phone (with mobile data off) as a WiFi router to play LAN games.
I just checked my Pixel 6a and it doesn't let me do that.
Thank you, smooth-brained developers at Google. I love not being able to do what I want with my purchased device.
That's not Google pushing that message. That's your mobile service provider.
It's Google.
I think there's a misunderstanding. I was trying to convey in my previous comment that Google does not allow me to create a hotspot with my mobile data turned off.
I put my SIM in my backup phone, a OnePlus Nord N10, to prove it to you. I can create a hotspot with my mobile data turned off on it.
I can't do so on my Pixel 6a.
EDIT: Apparently it's working for others on Pixels. See this comment further below in the chain. Not sure why its disabled for me.
Did you buy your Pixel directly from Google? If you got it from your cell carrier, they probably have the option to lock certain settings. I have a Pixel 5a from Google and I can tether all I want.
Bought from the Google Store. Running Android 13.
Which Android version are you on? And just to confirm, you're trying tethering with your mobile data off, right?
I'm on 13. I just turned off mobile data and I am able to turn on the hotspot.
Interesting. I'm not sure why it's disabled for me then.