onday, November 23, 2020 6:04 PM
To: hardw...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: [H] VPN question
Thank you all for the responses.
I went to whatsmyip.com on both the host and the VM and both returned the
same IP address. So I think I am good.
Remember that I am running VMWare Workstation.
On Behalf Of Greg
Sevart
Sent: Monday, November 23, 2020 5:13 PM
To: hardw...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: [H] VPN question
If you're running the VPN on the host, it's unlikely that the guest would be
using the VPN. For that to work (absent some magic in NordVPN), your VMware
egroup.com
Subject: [H] VPN question
Hey,
I am running NordVPN and VMWare 14 workstation on my Win 10 PC. If I am
running a VM on this PC, do I also need to install the VPN on the VM? Or is
it protected by the VPN on the host?
Thanks,
Bobby
Should be protected the way you have it but run a IP scan on the VM and
make sure it is showing location of your VPN and not your real IP addy.
Most providers have setups for routers so everything on your network is
protected.
lopaka
On Sun, Nov 22, 2020 at 6:33 AM Bobby Heid wrote:
> Hey,
>
>
Just do a what’s my IP from the host.
>
> On Nov 22, 2020 at 9:33 AM, mailto:bh...@sc.rr.com)> wrote:
>
>
>
> Hey, I am running NordVPN and VMWare 14 workstation on my Win 10 PC. If I am
> running a VM on this PC, do I also need to install the
Hey,
I am running NordVPN and VMWare 14 workstation on my Win 10 PC. If I am
running a VM on this PC, do I also need to install the VPN on the VM? Or is
it protected by the VPN on the host?
Thanks,
Bobby
If you are using HTTPS to access those services, you should be ok unless
they are proxying all SSL connections. To test if they are, visit a
webpage like your bank or email at home and take a look at the certificate
(the method of doing so depends on which browser you are using). See who
signed t
I have to spend some time in the hospital. They will have wireless
internet service, but I need to be able to make secure transactions
from my laptop to monitor things, and pay my bills. Is my best bet to
use a VPN? I know I could use my home cable service with something
like Hamachi LogMeIn bu
are having issue with b/c it's just plain wrong. Agree or
disagree? ;)
BINO
> Date: Tue, 27 Apr 2010 16:54:34 -0400
> From: chr...@mhonline.net
> To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
> Subject: Re: [H] VPN connection seals computer off from LAN
> The short of it is: As long a
On Tue, 27 Apr 2010, Brian Weeden wrote:
Right, but those addresses still only work on RoadRunner's private network,
not the public Internet.
Road Runner's "private" network is a part of my public internet. It goes
over the same wires.
At some point your private address need to get transl
il.com
> Date: Tue, 27 Apr 2010 11:55:41 -0400
> To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
> Subject: Re: [H] VPN connection seals computer off from LAN
>
> That doesn't make any sense - 10. addresses cannot be routed via VPN, same
> as 192. Both of those address ranges are explicitly
Right, but those addresses still only work on RoadRunner's private
network, not the public Internet.
At some point your private address need to get translated to a public
one, unless the only destinations you communicate with are within the
private network.
And I for one really dislike it
On Tue, 27 Apr 2010, Brian Weeden wrote:
That's not the same. Your router us doing NAT and translating your private IP
address to a public one.
Not really.
It doesn't break RFC because road runner doesn't route any of those IP's
outside their network, it is all internal for their management
ardwaregroup.com [mailto:hardware-
> boun...@hardwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of Christopher Fisk
> Sent: Tuesday, April 27, 2010 3:16 PM
> To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
> Subject: Re: [H] VPN connection seals computer off from LAN
>
> On Tue, 27 Apr 2010, Greg Sevart wrote:
>
> >
That's not the same. Your router us doing NAT and translating your
private IP address to a public one.
---
Brian
Sent from my iPhone
On 2010-04-27, at 4:16 PM, Christopher Fisk wrote:
On Tue, 27 Apr 2010, Greg Sevart wrote:
They (RC1918 addresses) absolutely can be routed over a
On Tue, 27 Apr 2010, Greg Sevart wrote:
They (RC1918 addresses) absolutely can be routed over a VPN. The whole idea
is to encapsulate and encrypt packets--the "internet routers" never see the
RFC1918 addresses.
Hell, there is nothing keeping them from being routed across the internet
as a who
.com] On Behalf Of Brian Weeden
> > Sent: Tuesday, April 27, 2010 10:56 AM
> > To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
> > Subject: Re: [H] VPN connection seals computer off from LAN
> >
> > That doesn't make any sense - 10. addresses cannot be routed via VPN,
> >
resses.
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: hardware-boun...@hardwaregroup.com [mailto:hardware-
> > boun...@hardwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of Brian Weeden
> > Sent: Tuesday, April 27, 2010 10:56 AM
> > To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
> > Subject: Re: [H] VPN conne
rdwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of Brian Weeden
> Sent: Tuesday, April 27, 2010 10:56 AM
> To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
> Subject: Re: [H] VPN connection seals computer off from LAN
>
> That doesn't make any sense - 10. addresses cannot be routed via VPN,
> same as 192. Both of thos
Behalf Of Brian Weeden
> Sent: Sunday, April 25, 2010 10:45 AM
> To: hwg
> Subject: [H] VPN connection seals computer off from LAN
>
> This is very weird. I have a VPN setup and it's been acting weird - when I
> connect to it using one of the machines on my LAN, that machines
>
Travelport Product Development Center
6901 S Havana St
Centennial, CO 80112
-Original Message-
From: hardware-boun...@hardwaregroup.com
[mailto:hardware-boun...@hardwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of Brian Weeden
Sent: Sunday, April 25, 2010 10:45 AM
To: hwg
Subject: [H] VPN connection seals
On Monday 26 April 2010 15:14:56 Brian Weeden wrote:
> I even deleted and re-created
> the VPN connection using the same settings on both machines.
>
> This just got even weirder - I rebooted the machine, and now it works
> fine.
>
> I guess we just chalk this up to a Windows "feature".
>
> ---
No client - just a straight VPN setup through Windows to a commercial
service. And yes, same login info. I even deleted and re-created the VPN
connection using the same settings on both machines.
This just got even weirder - I rebooted the machine, and now it works fine.
I guess we just chalk
On Mon, 26 Apr 2010, Brian Weeden wrote:
It seems very unlikely to be a server thing to me. If I connect to the VPN
on my main computer, it works just fine and everything on the LAN still
works. It's only my other computer that disappears from the LAN when it
connects to the VPN. So I've gott
It seems very unlikely to be a server thing to me. If I connect to the VPN
on my main computer, it works just fine and everything on the LAN still
works. It's only my other computer that disappears from the LAN when it
connects to the VPN. So I've gotta figure that it is a local windows
config.
On Mon, 26 Apr 2010, maccrawj wrote:
Would issuing a "route print" on the affected machine reveal the result of
this? I'm assuming the 0.0.0.0 is catch-all route for non-VPN traffic.
Not conclusively. VPN software generally hooks into the TCP stack and
depending on the setup may or may not a
Would issuing a "route print" on the affected machine reveal the result of this? I'm
assuming the 0.0.0.0 is catch-all route for non-VPN traffic.
On 4/25/2010 1:14 PM, Bino Gopal wrote:
Sounds like split tunneling being disabled on the one computer...could that
somehow be set on the VPN serv
Sounds like split tunneling being disabled on the one computer...could that
somehow be set on the VPN server if it's not showing on the client?
BINO
> From: brian.wee...@gmail.com
> Date: Sun, 25 Apr 2010 12:45:01 -0400
> To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
> Subject: [H] VPN
This is very weird. I have a VPN setup and it's been acting weird - when I
connect to it using one of the machines on my LAN, that machines effectively
drops off the network. It can browse the internet just fine, but none of
the other machines on the LAN can connect to it. Interestingly, althoug
I'm also seeing more folks use VPN services like OpenVPN or even paid services
to keep their ISP's
packet sniffing at bay.
> Winterlight wrote:
> > Using a VPN to protect yourself when using public WAP involves logging
> > into the public WAP, and then using a VPN from your PC to your home o
Ditto others who have said -- OpenVPN.
I don't have any experience running OpenVPN on windows computers, but
the server configuration on a BSD box was not terribly complicated,
and the client software for Mac at least is quite good.
I think some versions of dd-wrt or some other similar home
On Tue, 9 Jun 2009, Bryan Seitz wrote:
OpenVPN
IMO putty & proxy server is easier & faster.
Christopher Fisk
--
Kaylee: "Figures. First time on the Core and what do I get to do? Dig
through trash. Why couldn't he send me shopping at the triplex, or...
Oooh, synchronizers!"
OpenVPN
On Tue, Jun 09, 2009 at 09:34:18AM -0400, Christopher Fisk wrote:
> On Mon, 8 Jun 2009, Winterlight wrote:
>
> > Using a VPN to protect yourself when using public WAP involves logging into
> > the public WAP, and then using a VPN from your PC to your home or work PC
> > and
> > then us
On Mon, 8 Jun 2009, Winterlight wrote:
Using a VPN to protect yourself when using public WAP involves logging into
the public WAP, and then using a VPN from your PC to your home or work PC and
then using that safe internet connection. Everything in between your laptop
and your home PC is encry
And keep in mind that while the VPN tunnel is encrypted, once the data
leaves the tunnel it's back to what it was before. So something like email
over http is now back to being unencrypted cleartext once it hits your home
machine, leaves the tunnel and goes out onto the internet, while https
conne
Winterlight wrote:
> Using a VPN to protect yourself when using public WAP involves logging
> into the public WAP, and then using a VPN from your PC to your home or
> work PC and then using that safe internet connection. Everything in
> between your laptop and your home PC is encrypted so nobody ca
Using a VPN to protect yourself when using public WAP involves
logging into the public WAP, and then using a VPN from your PC to
your home or work PC and then using that safe internet connection.
Everything in between your laptop and your home PC is encrypted so
nobody can snoop. Do I have it r
On Thu, 12 Feb 2009, mark.dodge wrote:
Using plink to logon to putty running on a windows box would be a rough
learning curve for the owner much less me not knowing that much about it.
You kidding? All you do is set up the putty connection.
Have a batch file with the following:
start plink
: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 08:39
To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: [H] VPN problems
On Tue, 10 Feb 2009, Christopher Fisk wrote:
> On Tue, 10 Feb 2009, mark.dodge wrote:
>
>> Come on there are a lot of network guys here, can anyone give me any
>> suggestions? I reall
On Tue, 10 Feb 2009, Christopher Fisk wrote:
On Tue, 10 Feb 2009, mark.dodge wrote:
Come on there are a lot of network guys here, can anyone give me any
suggestions? I really need to get this resolved. Someone just tell me the
way they would set it up and I can start there. I'm thinking tha
On Tue, 10 Feb 2009, mark.dodge wrote:
Come on there are a lot of network guys here, can anyone give me any
suggestions? I really need to get this resolved. Someone just tell me the
way they would set it up and I can start there. I'm thinking that
eliminating the router and configuring one of th
r the terminal services, is that correct?
-Original Message-
From: hardware-boun...@hardwaregroup.com
[mailto:hardware-boun...@hardwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of mark.dodge
Sent: Saturday, February 07, 2009 17:37
To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: [H] VPN problems
What would be b
ry 05, 2009 1:03 PM
To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: [H] VPN problems
On Thu, 5 Feb 2009, mark.dodge wrote:
> I have one Windows 2003 server running Terminal Services set up in each of
> three offices that I would like to get into from the outside world, one to
> be able to do so
On Thu, 5 Feb 2009, mark.dodge wrote:
I have one Windows 2003 server running Terminal Services set up in each of
three offices that I would like to get into from the outside world, one to
be able to do some admin stuff without having to go to each office and
another for the owner to be able to l
I have one Windows 2003 server running Terminal Services set up in each of
three offices that I would like to get into from the outside world, one to
be able to do some admin stuff without having to go to each office and
another for the owner to be able to look at the cameras hooked up to each
stor
On Sun, 2 Oct 2005, Chris Shaw wrote:
Anyone on this list familiar with VPN's & would be willing to answer a
few questions off list??
It's certainly a broad question, but I'll help you out.
Christopher Fisk
--
"My opponent keeps saying I give too much tax relief to the top 1%, but he
hadn't
Anyone on this list familiar with VPN's & would be willing to answer a few
questions off list??
Thanks!!
--
C L Shaw <><
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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