Uninitiated noon question below.

A couple of days ago, this haprogram https://programming.dev/post/41491279

Now, during the phonecall with my ISP, the guy asked, “is your router an ASUS?” to which I answered, “yes and no, because it’s sold as a router but I have it in AP mode and my actual router is OpenWrt on a Raspberry Pi.” To which he replied “noice!”

How did he know the make of my access point? A few of my own thoughts are:

  1. he was referring to historical data (I’ve been a loyal customer of theirs for a looong time…) from a time when I was using the same topology (setup?) but without a VPN on the router, so the hostname of the AP (stored in /etc/hostname on the ASUS OS/firmware ?) was simply displayed on whatever software an ISP uses for troubleshooting through… an ARP? But aren’t ARPs limited to a LAN/they cannot resolve beyond a hop? Or perhaps a variant of DNS? How indeed do hostnames transmit? Are they in the IP header by default?
  2. as in 1 above, but he actively used nmap or some other recog program
  3. as in 1 above but from a time when I was in fact using the ASUS machine as a router
  4. my VPN is “leaking” - not likely, because all my traffic either goes through the wireguard interface on OpenWrt/RPi, or it doesn’t go anywhere…

If 1, 2 or 3: why do they keep historical data on me? Is it praxis?

  • Feyr@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    The first 3 bytes of the Mac address is an OUI: organizationionally unique identifier. They’re centrally managed by some org, and you can look them up on google