I’m currently stuck in a used bedroom infested with flies at the time of writing this.

My parents have decided to block internet whenever I try to move my PC back upstairs. Asking them wouldn’t work out because it usually falls on deaf ears.

A few days ago, they moved it without my knowledge, and I noticed that my folding table was gone from my bedroom.

I’m planning to set it back up again, but they might turn my internet off when they know that I’m doing so. I’m trying to get a few ideas and create a plan to move my PC back upstairs.

I found a few tutorials on getting through parental controls, but the tutorials are done on Windows and parental controls are set up using TP-Link.

  • @TexMexBazooka@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    149 months ago

    It sorta depends on exactly how the blocking works but it’s most likely by MAC address. You can spoof this address through windows I believe, which will make the network view you as a different system.

    This article provided a few ways to do this: https://www.digitalcitizen.life/change-mac-address-windows/

    That would be your path of least resistance to dodge network blocking, assuming it’s being filtered via MAC address

    • yeehaw
      link
      fedilink
      49 months ago

      Could it be Mac filtering though? Sounds like they’re implying that only when the computer goes upstairs it would be blocked.

      • @TexMexBazooka@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        59 months ago

        My interpretation is that the parents are manually putting blocks in place after the device is moved. Of course if that’s the case and they’re actively managing this, you can get around it but they’ll notice eventually either way.

        Without knowing more specifics it’s hard to say. If it’s over a wireless network, using consumer grade equipment, Mac filtering is the option most people have out of the box. They can enable/disable it from a phone if they’re using TP-Links app.

        Anything else involves VLANs and firewall rules, and if that’s the case OP is out of their depth