Is there any harm in changing the mac address of my LAN adapter?

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Solution 1

Well, your second computer will also get all of the traffic intended for your first computer. But that shouldn't be a problem since the NIC should filter out the traffic headed for your other computer (based on the IP in the packets). A better idea would be to get a router, set its mac address to that of your first computer, and then connect to it from both of your other computers. The other advantage would be that you should be able to connect with other computers, too.

Solution 2

If both of those computers are on the same network then yeah having duplicate MAC addresses is a bad idea. The whole idea of MAC addresses is that they are unique for network identification purposes (long before your IP stack comes into play).

Check out https://serverfault.com/questions/88830/can-duplicate-mac-addresses-on-same-lan-cause-trouble for some insight via the answers to that similar question.

HTH...

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Updated on September 17, 2022

Comments

  • user882903
    user882903 over 1 year

    My internet provider has done static binding to thee MAC address of my adapter. Now I need to use the same internet connection on another machine also.

    So, I figure that one way of doing that is to change the mac address of my second machine to that of my first machine (making both of them same).

    Is there any harm in doing that? Or any reasons this is not advised?

  • Dave M
    Dave M over 13 years
    Router would solve the problem, be relatively inexpensive and allow multiple users easily.
  • DrColossos
    DrColossos over 13 years
    Having two devices with the same MAC will cause problems; the DHCP server cannot tell them apart and will only assign one IP address.
  • Wayne Werner
    Wayne Werner over 13 years
    @Kevin, If you manually assign IP addresses that won't be a problem... but you're right if the OP is using DHCP and not static IPs. I guess the OP's ISP probably connects the IP to his/her MAC address and probably wouldn't route the packets to a different IP. Boy that's a lot of P's...