How do you spoof your IP address?

How do you spoof your IP address? I know you can’t use a proxy server with Internet Explorer, but does anyone know if this still works with Netscape 6? I’d hate to update and have to figure out a new workaround to maintain my anonymity where needed.

Thanks in advance.

Well, really easy way, but not too convenient: Use http://www.noproxy.com for all your browsing needs. I’d actually like to know a way to do this easily without doing that, since I never bother.

Jman

It’s not that simple. If you know enough about networking and programming to make use of a spoofed IP, you would know how to do it.

You don’t get any return data with a spoofed IP–it’s only useful for doing something on a remote computer, where you don’t need any feedback. Because return traffic is routed using, you guessed it, the IP address. You have to custom-design packets to initiate and acknowledge a connection, then to do whatever it is you want to do on the remote machine. You have to work blind, in other words.

Basically, spoofing an address wouldn’t help you browse the web anonymously. And you CAN use a proxy with IE. Go to tools|internet options|connections|LAN settings and look around.

Um… er… isn’t that why you use a proxy server? It acts as a, how do you say, proxy?

With all that…

Is there, then, a list of public proxies that can be used?

The IT guys here at work obviously have alarms that go off when a specific site is accessed.

(IE: Napster. I hit the site and the next day had IT guys up gutting my PC…and I hadn’t even used it!)

Thanks!

That’s not my understanding of “spoofing” at all. Anonimity is one thing but it’s a very long way from reverse engineering with a view to illegal activity. Maybe things are different on this side of the pond ?

Spoofing is basically defined as having a remote system answer a query from a third system on your behalf.

Akin to the phone answering service at my local pub:
10 cents – “He’s here.”
25 cents – “He just left.”
50 cents – “Haven’t seen him.”
1 dollar – “Who??”

from the jargon file:

Oh, please. MIT is just out to sell books with their “jargon” file a.k.a. hacker dictionary. I’d take what they have to say with a grain of salt. The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing on the other hand “is available on paper from your local printer for only £0.00 (plus paper etc.)”

Are you going to believe the one that had an entry for “chad” since 1996 or the one that just added it in last week because non-tech people actually started using the word?

Ahh, not so different. Cheers, Joe_Cool

Since we at the SDMB rely on good IP info in our never-ending battle against sock puppets, and because I can think of no legitimate reason to spoof a site, I am closing this thread.