That program is what sees the MAC and that MAC is not the receivers MAC. The middlewere is not only on the receiver but also the server has a middleware solution program that works on their servers. You are not quite understanding it Shooty. I do not know much about how the connectivity on them methods that use the '78' as I actually have never went that route, believe it or not but the last 6 were sure to be an original sequence so could be attached to the created '78' MAC and have the knowledge that you did not spoof another MAC. That receiver's MAC would start with the first 6 digits as a number of different digits other then 00:1a:79. His solution (and BIO was a computer/networking genius), his solution at the time for them '78' MACs was to use the last 6 digits of the receiver's own MAC (that statement from BIO is still posted here somewhere). Just an observation!BIO who was one of the original staff members when all this iptv started getting more popular, he had predicted back in 2014 that MAC spoofs would happen. If you have to internally change the MAC# in a STB app, they should use 78, avoiding the problem of someone randomly making up a MAC, that will "eventually" get registered to a new STB. Whatever happened to the 00:1A:78 rule for STB Emulator apps (Stalker based), reserving 79 for the STB's with hard coded MAC's?
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