How can I connect directly to a device over 3G? - General Topics

I'd like to be able to deploy a lightweight web server on my mobile device (android 2.1) but there are obviously NAT issues with respect to the mobile provider's network. Is there anyway I can make my device publicly available/addressable over the internet?
Thanks

as far as i know you cant, the service provider will assign each device a private address, it can only go online through their own NAT services, the phone will connect to any GSM Service providers signal distributors.
the only public IP available would be the Signal Distributors, and I doubt very highly your service provider would go through the trouble of assigning your phone a static private IP and then Port forwarding to your phone.
you can do this over WIFI without trouble you just need webservices running on the phone.
as far as i know there is no direct way of connecting to your mobile phone using a public IP Address

Related

How to open ports?

Hello,
I installed debian on the JF 1.5 I'm running on my phone, then I installed (in Debian, of course) OpenSSH Server.
Now, when the phone is connected to my LAN via Wifi, I can SSH it to its IP address even from my PC, and login to Debian... like to a real computer
I'd like to open inbound connections to port 22 on Android, to allow me connect with SSH also when it's on 3G network, using the IP that was assigned by mobile carrier. How I can do it?
Thanks in advance!
I don't think open port on phone do anything.
the blocking is on your operator network. they have firewall too.
Maybe my operator doesn't? I'm using Tre (Italy). What I can do to test it?
Up Up, please
but most mobile operators use private address + proxy scheme. how could you bypass that? (even if the client is also in the same mobile network, your carrier is very likely to implement subnet isolation for security reasons.)

[Q] IP address assigned to mobile during internet sharing from pc

I am using xiomi redmi note. In my phone manager software I have option to share internet from pc.
My question is if I share my PC internet to android phone through usb, what will be the IP address
assigned to the phone? How can I find it? In my company my PC is assigned to static IP, so if both my PC
and mobile uses same ip , then IP conflict will come. I don't want to show my identity. Will my company network administrator able to
find that I am sharing office internet to my mobile.? Will they able to find which computer in network is sharing internet with mobile?

Cannot access local lan web site (sometimes)

I have various machines on my lan in 192.168.1.*, I have a local DNS server to give those machines names. This normally works great, but my new Samsung Galaxy S21 sometimes says "cannot access" when I point it at a web address of a server running on my lan. I'll use a network utility app to do a DNS lookup of the other system, and it will tell me the correct address, then I'll use the same network utility to do a traceroute, and it will try to talk to a local IP I do not have in my network, in my DNS database, or anywhere in the set of addresses my router knows about. Where does this ghost address come from? Does the phone imagine that is the gateway it ought to be using for some reason? (The router's DHCP server certainly doesn't claim an unknown address is the gateway).
Every time I start trying to investigate the problem in more detail, everything suddenly starts working perfectly.
Does this ring a bell for anyone? Any clue what is going on? Maybe I should assign my phone's network statically and see if it works better.

Use Digital Streaming Services with OLOW VPN

A virtual private network, or VPN, is an encrypted connection over the Internet from a device to a network. The encrypted connection helps ensure that sensitive data is safely transmitted. Everyone is using VPN according to their needs. Businesses use VPNs to connect remote datacenters, and individuals can use VPNs to get access to network resources when they’re not physically on the same LAN (local area network), or as a method for securing and encrypting their communications when they’re using an untrusted public network.
How it works
A VPN works by routing your device’s internet connection through your chosen VPN’s private server rather than your internet service provider (ISP) so that when your data is transmitted to the internet, it comes from the VPN rather than your system. The VPN acts as an intermediary of sorts as you connect to the internet, thereby hiding your IP address – the string of numbers your ISP assigns your device – and protecting your identity. Furthermore, if your data is somehow intercepted, it will be unreadable until it reaches its final destination.
A VPN creates a private “tunnel” from your device to the internet and hides your vital data through something that is known as encryption.
syncmedia1 said:
Spoiler
A virtual private network, or VPN, is an encrypted connection over the Internet from a device to a network. The encrypted connection helps ensure that sensitive data is safely transmitted. Everyone is using VPN according to their needs. Businesses use VPNs to connect remote datacenters, and individuals can use VPNs to get access to network resources when they’re not physically on the same LAN (local area network), or as a method for securing and encrypting their communications when they’re using an untrusted public network.
How it works
A VPN works by routing your device’s internet connection through your chosen VPN’s private server rather than your internet service provider (ISP) so that when your data is transmitted to the internet, it comes from the VPN rather than your system. The VPN acts as an intermediary of sorts as you connect to the internet, thereby hiding your IP address – the string of numbers your ISP assigns your device – and protecting your identity. Furthermore, if your data is somehow intercepted, it will be unreadable until it reaches its final destination.
A VPN creates a private “tunnel” from your device to the internet and hides your vital data through something that is known as encryption.
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@syncmedia1 Please check your private messages / conversations. Thanks very much!
Regards
Oswald Boelcke

Help ME! My ip address is hacked? Please

I'm convinced either my WiFi ip address is sending out files to all connected devices, infecting my TV and Xbox and phones ..it seems to be mainly a "keylogger" sending all my data and photos via a crypto mining file hosting onto settings on all my devices...the Terms and Use are the same on all my devices and they are all different Manufacturers....wtf is going on
Technically seen
1. IP address is your address in a computer network - both a public and a local IP address exists - that uses Internet Protocol for communication.
2. Wi-Fi is the ( wireless ) method to access it.
Resume: Speaking of Wi-Fi-IP-address is nonsense.

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