I think it depends on your country tbh. Here in Canada, I've had the same IP as a few of my wifes' family members, and they live in a different part of the city than me.
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LoL WTH how old are you ?
I wonder how do you expect to edit the IP address with a proxy. A proxy is nothing else than a computer, just like a dedicate server, in which allow remote connection, so while you're navigating in the internet, you will use that computer IP instead of yours, not like you can put any IP you wants. Not to mention that IP's are made "regionally", that's why you can IP-ban certain countries.
So I guess my idea was pretty good its just that peoples can't really say a good things ?
You need to learn what constructive criticism is. When someone says something isn't a good idea, and provides a reason as to why they believe it isn't, they aren't flaming as you'd like to think they are.
@Osiris: I'm probably wrong about the proxy part, as I've never used one in my life. My statement still stands it's very possible to have the same IP as someone else. I had the same IP at one point as my sister in law and mother in law when they lived on the opposite side of town.... and no, we weren't on the same account or even the same company for that matter. As for the "odds" of being in the same area as an Admin.. well... I do know Raptor had told me at one point one of his staff members lived right down the street from me. Dell Honne (Flyff Mod) lives approx. 10 blocks away from me. I think it's too much of a risk putting this system in.
Well as I said earlyer when your IP changes just log to your original admin/gm account it'll update.
I said that when you use the !setipgm [charname] on someone in the SQL it'll be like:
AccountName | lastKnownIP
So now when you log to every account there is a check in the commandProccessor to see if you're IPGM if so you can do commands.
Once your IP changes when you log to your account that was in the SQL under AccountName it'll update you're new IP.
Not really. The internet communication is based on IP, not on MAC addresses. Sure, you can spoof a packet's source IP address, but you're also going to fail TCP handshake.
It's not as easy as just changing a registry entry and *poofs* your IP changes. Both the source and remote host need to know each other's IP address in order to communicate.
Which is why IP spoofing are only mostly used in DoS attacks.