Reply 20 of 36, by tony359
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DaveDDS wrote on 2026-04-15, 00:30:If you can change it, you would want to make sure it doesn't conflict with any other on your network. I do get that given the "globally unique" nature of MACs back in the day, some vendors also used them as a unique serial number - and if features are enabled/disabled based on MAC, you might want to change it. But just copying a mac from a similar system on your network would cause conflicts.
There is a MAC address range reserved for "local use", which is: AC:DE:48:xx:xx:xx but you would be unlikely to find any such MAC which enables locked-out features.
The device is never going to be networked and the "protection" was just a simple one as the device is a nice product, nobody would have ever tried to hack it 😀 It wouldn't make sense to invest more money on a licensing protection.
I'd be happy to try AC:DE:48, I'm confident there are no checks! 😁
Thanks @shevalier
I'll try that too!
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