John
Member
Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
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Sitting on my laptop thethered through my phone.
How would o2 know I'm not using the phone?
Do they care even if I am?
I can't see how they'd know I'm not using the phone to start with but if anybody knows 100% it would be nice to find out.
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MarkM
Member
Registered: 11th Apr 01
Location: Liverpool
User status: Offline
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Is this similar to using my E71 as a modem and connecting to O2 mobile internet through my laptop?
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Dom
Member
Registered: 13th Sep 03
User status: Offline
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Traffic usage is the only thing they will complain about, they can't detect that you're tethering, so just stick within your usage and you'll be a.o.k
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John
Member
Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
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Bubble has given us some acronyms before saying that you get something different when you connect with a pc but I just can't see how.
It's a wireless tethering program on my magic that will show exactly like any other program, eg google maps would to the network.
I agree totally with you Dom, just came into my head because I don't normally do it.
Mark, yip that's exactly it.
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Reecemac
Member
Registered: 7th Jun 06
Location: Essex
User status: Offline
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Iv been doing it on my dream for about 6-8 months, just browsing no heavy downloads and they aint said anything. They no way to tell, they might like dom said, moan if you go over your usage.
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John
Member
Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
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I've got unlimited data, which although not unlimited I'll probably never go near.
I've not got much cause to use so I shouldn't ever go over any soft limit.
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Brett
Premium Member
Registered: 16th Dec 02
Location: Manchester
User status: Offline
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This on your Magic John? What's it called?
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John
Member
Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
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Yip, WiFi tether for root users its called but there are others.
It creates a wireless access point, really easy and it was fast where I was earlier on.
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ed
Member
Registered: 10th Sep 03
User status: Offline
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I've been doing this for ages on my iPhone. o2 seem to be none the wiser as I'm just accessing the same stuff, only on a bigger screen
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Doug
Member
Registered: 8th Oct 03
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by loafofbrett
This on your Magic John? What's it called?
You need to root your phone first.
Just be aware that a rooted Android device is SO bloody un-secure
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jamied
Member
Registered: 27th Oct 03
Location: Marbella,Spain Drives: C63
User status: Offline
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umm might give this ago
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John
Member
Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Doug
quote: Originally posted by loafofbrett
This on your Magic John? What's it called?
You need to root your phone first.
Just be aware that a rooted Android device is SO bloody un-secure
Unsecure how?
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Doug
Member
Registered: 8th Oct 03
User status: Offline
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Use the ADB and you can extract all the database files in the phone. Passwords etc are all stored in plain text in those databases. No encryption or anything
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John
Member
Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
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So by unsecure you mean somebody would have to have already stolen your phone, then be a theif that bothered reading forums to find out how to use the sdk
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Jambo
Member
Registered: 8th Sep 01
Location: Maidenhead, Drives: VXR Arctic
User status: Offline
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Orange say that they can tell, allthough i have no idea how, maybe just a scare tactic?
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noshua
Member
Registered: 19th Nov 08
User status: Offline
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It will be, no optimized websites or anything so much more bandwidth usage.
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Ian
Site Administrator
Registered: 28th Aug 99
Location: Liverpool
User status: Online
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I can tell whether you're using a phone or a computer, so I would guess your service provider will be able to.
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John
Member
Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
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I'm on just my phone tonight but when you've got a spare 10 minutes I can play what's the browser for research purposes.
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Ian
Site Administrator
Registered: 28th Aug 99
Location: Liverpool
User status: Online
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Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android 1.5; en-gb; T-Mobile G1 Build/CUPCAKE) AppleWebKit/528.5+ (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/3.1.2 Mobile Safari/525.20.1
There's a few clues there in the user agent that you're on a mobile device.
Obviously spoofable because its the browser which prepares that string to go with the HTTP request, but if you don't alter that then it'll be available on your entire route.
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