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[Guide] Bot "safe" - hide IP and change hardware ID.

gerwim

New Member
Joined
Apr 12, 2010
Messages
105
Hi there,

First I want to make clear:
1. With "safe" I mean, incase your account is banned, you can say you were hacked.
2. This method costs money (but you have a free 3 day trial though).
3. You can now use multiple IP's without using a VM. See this thread for more information:
https://pingbuster.net/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=133


Alright. What were going todo is getting a different IP and a different hardware ID (only possible if your PC is powerful enough to run a virtual machine, if not you can still change your IP, but will reduce the chance this will work).

1. (Optional) Install WinXP or whatever version you prefer in a VM.
2. Create an account here: PingBuster - lower your ping, be anonymous and be secure
3. Log in on your new account and click the 3 day trial button
4. Install ProxyCap (32bit: http://pingbuster.net/files/proxycap32.msi 64 bit: http://pingbuster.net/files/proxycap64.msi if you dont know what version to pick, pick 32 bit).
5. Open ProxyCap and right click on the icon bottom-right and click preferences.
6. Go to proxies and add the following proxy: localhost, port 7065
proxycap1.png

7. Go to rules and add WoW.exe and Launcher.exe
proxycap2.png

8. Click OK, click OK again.
9. Open up the PingBuster application (download it here: http://pingbuster.net/app/pingbuster.exe)
app1.png

10. Click options and select the options you want (I recommend "Automatically reconnect", this will reconnect for you when your connection is interrupted).
11. Login with your account details, and you are running behind a different ip!

You can test it, to see if it succesfully worked by adding yourbrowser.exe as a rule (thus firefox.exe, iexplore.exe etc) then go to What Is My IP Address - Shows Your IP Address

If you are, for whatever reason not able to set it up, use their live support found at the website PingBuster - lower your ping, be anonymous and be secure
 
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Using a VM won't spoof your MAC address except on localhost. And actually as long as you're behind a proxy you should not need to change your MAC, unless you're paranoid enough to think your proxy provider could give your original IP and MAC to Blizzard.
 
I'm looking into buildings rig's for VM's atm, does anyone know on estimate how many wow's could run in a VM on a top specced PC with the new sandybridge proccesors overclocked?
 
Using a VM won't spoof your MAC address except on localhost. And actually as long as you're behind a proxy you should not need to change your MAC, unless you're paranoid enough to think your proxy provider could give your original IP and MAC to Blizzard.

Really? Looks like I'll invest in quality proxies then.
 
Using a VM won't spoof your MAC address except on localhost. And actually as long as you're behind a proxy you should not need to change your MAC, unless you're paranoid enough to think your proxy provider could give your original IP and MAC to Blizzard.

A VM will spoof it, atleast VMware, as it creates a virtual network adapter. Try yourself: open CMD and then "ipconfig /all" and see the physical address. Also, Blizzard can see your MAC address by sending the data over to their servers.
 
You can run almost anything you want on a VM box. We are running SQL Server 2008 with MSCS (Microsoft Clustering Services) failover, 2 node setup. So, WoW would be a joke.
 
You can run almost anything you want on a VM box. We are running SQL Server 2008 with MSCS (Microsoft Clustering Services) failover, 2 node setup. So, WoW would be a joke.
Problem with WoW was due to the 3D engine, and having a VM take up a dedicated part of the graphic card's RAM.
 
The Mac changer won't do you much good. Since it will be the same for all wow sessions meaning you will still get banned on multiple wow's. Proxy is a good one but then don't use the same proxy IP on all wow's this is something proxy cap can do if your using different wow folders which you should. Running wow inside a VM will get you a different MAC but then again don't put all your wow's in one VM.

One thing that am not sure bliz is checking but they should is CPUID, Even in VMWare workstation you will not change this by default.


Aswell please note that bliz does not store mac's or other hardware id's for the use of detecting multiple accounts on the same computer. They will only check to see the current only connections so if your main account isn't on at the same time as your bot there is almost no risk. (source bossland)
 
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I made a post similar to this here in the forums If you care to read it.

Long story short, you can change your SID in a VM with sysprep (Windows tool). I use this with VMware Workstation.
 
I made a post similar to this here in the forums If you care to read it.

Long story short, you can change your SID in a VM with sysprep (Windows tool). I use this with VMware Workstation.

Don't think they are collecting Sid sins it stands for Security ID collecting them might be a bit of a privacy issue. Other wise I agree whit your post.


Sid's are used for identifying computers in domains or local networks among other stuff
 
I suppose you're right, SID could be a security issue if they collected it. However, do you really think they would collect CPUID? There's got to be tons of people out there using the same exact processor as your botting computer, doesn't really seem to me like they'd be able to use it as evidence that you're connected to multiple accounts that are botting. To my knowledge the CPUIDs aren't unique, anybody with the same exact model will turn up with the same ID as you.
 
I suppose you're right, SID could be a security issue if they collected it. However, do you really think they would collect CPUID? There's got to be tons of people out there using the same exact processor as your botting computer, doesn't really seem to me like they'd be able to use it as evidence that you're connected to multiple accounts that are botting. To my knowledge the CPUIDs aren't unique, anybody with the same exact model will turn up with the same ID as you.
I'm not sure whether a CPU id is unique or not, but hardware is for sure.
 
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