Hi, I guess I misunderstood the meaning of being separated by a bridge / router. So consider the following topology: So, lets say the topology is like this: A, B and C are 3 machines connected to a single router. The router is connected to the Internet. Say I am A. Can I sniff packets going from B and C to the internet? Are A, B, and C considered to be separated by a router? Thanks for your help, Tarun On 10/6/05, Breen Mullins <bmullins@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, 2005-10-06 at 19:10 -0500, Tarun Siripurapu wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I do not have access to backend cabling neither do I want to do > > anything bad or illegal. I am on a campus network and want to see the > > google search queries within my subnet. I heard that it was possible > > that I can view all packets from any machine that is not separated > > from my machine by a bridge / router. I am not trying to do anything > > bad like sniff people's passwords - I only want to view unencrypted > > search queries. > > Since you're on a campus network, I can guarantee you that you're > separated from the other students on the resnet by a bridge. That > much is 100% certain. > > Interesting idea, though. > > Cheers - > > Breen > > -- > Breen Mullins 408-435-8401x123 > SQA Engineer 0xde05499b > Asante Technologies, Inc. > > >
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