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you will need to contact your ISP. 

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You need to contact your ISP, some ISPs use natted connections for users without static IPs, this might have ddos protection.  I would contact your ISP though, and ask for someone who can change your IP address or switch you to a natted connection if you don't want to host servers.  

 

Also know that many ddos attacks attack a service this means if you don't have a port open, or you don't have any services running then they are unable to exploit those services.  To ddos a web server a web server must be running.  Don't think you can just set yourself up and not contact your ISP.  Seriously, contact your ISP and ask them about your connection.  

 

Most ddos claims are most likely BS though.  Still never hurts to ask your ISP to put you on a natted connection.  Or use a VPN next time you are doing something a little suspicious. 

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22 minutes ago, Cry | kickback.com | csgopot.win said:

Hello, i got scammed by some dude. Now he is threathing me whit ddos if i don't pay hi more (cs:go skins) He already showed that he can ddos me.

 

I really want to change my ip so that he can't do it. Pls how do i do it?

 

i'm on win 10

Do you have any opened ports? If not, you have nothing to worry about.

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1 minute ago, Cry | kickback.com | csgopot.win said:

How do i check that?

 

Login onto your router and check..I highly doubt that you do..

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51 minutes ago, Cry | kickback.com | csgopot.win said:

Hello, i got scammed by some dude. Now he is threathing me whit ddos if i don't pay hi more (cs:go skins) He already showed that he can ddos me.

 

I really want to change my ip so that he can't do it. Pls how do i do it?

 

i'm on win 10

 

Go to your browser and type in '192.168.0.1' (Should be the private IP of your router, if not, check on the back of it) and look around the page for your router settings. You can see if there are any open ports.

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Telia most likely has dynamic IPs. In my case, every router restart gives me a new IP (I am using Telia in Estonia).

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14 minutes ago, jj9987 said:

Telia most likely has dynamic IPs. In my case, every router restart gives me a new IP (I am using Telia in Estonia).

Yea, but sometimes you have to pay more for a dynamic IP

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25 minutes ago, Cry | kickback.com | csgopot.win said:

Telia, in sweden.

If he kicked you from a match and claimed that he DDoSed you then he, like so many others, is lying to you and all he did was kick you from a hosted match which means you can join another match but not that one he is hosting. How did he prove to you he can DDoD you by just saying so....news flash...ppl lie on the internet.

 

Just move on with your life and if/when you see him just tell hime to eff off and go to hell in a hand basket!

 

22 minutes ago, Sparky808300 said:

no idea how to check if your ports are open with that service but if you go into advanced settings it should be somewhere around there and no it isn't the same as port forwarding 

In a router, you check for open ports under UPnP (universal plug and play) which will show what ports are open, now this is only if UPnP is enabled in the router. 

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51 minutes ago, Abdul201588 said:

Do you have any opened ports? If not, you have nothing to worry about.

Open ports has nothing to do with being ddosed also just restart your modem leave it off for a few minutes and plug it back in your ip will probly change use ipchicken or another ip website to check what you ip is before and after the reset if its different your ip has changed 

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3 minutes ago, EvilCat70 said:

Yea, but sometimes you have to pay more for a dynamic IP

Here Telia actually offers static IP as additional paid service.

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1 minute ago, jj9987 said:

Here Telia actually offers static IP as additional paid service.

Why would anyone want to pay extra for something that shouldn't exist anymore... All ISPs should give dynamic IPs for free

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28 minutes ago, EvilCat70 said:

Why would anyone want to pay extra for something that shouldn't exist anymore... All ISPs should give dynamic IPs for free

You may be a little confused.

 

A static IP is, situationally, more useful than a dynamic IP. Especially when hosting any form of server. A static is usually a paid service. For a very basic example that you can get around through various methods, I use a static IP address for my Teamspeak server, and I have a domain name pointed to that IP Address. If my IP changes, that domain name is no longer pointed to my server. So when I make a new Teamspeak, I make sure to assign it the same static (in AWS).

 

When I was hosting my Teamspeak in my home, I had a dynamic IP Address. I also pointed the domain name to my IP Address. So when I'd lose power I would come back online and have a new IP, and people would no longer be able to reach Teamspeak via the domain name.

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5 minutes ago, JoeyDM said:

You may be a little confused.

 

A static IP is, situationally, more useful than a dynamic IP. A static is usually a paid service. For a very basic example that you can get around through various methods, I use a static IP address for my Teamspeak server, and I have a domain name pointed to that IP Address. If my IP changes, that domain name is no longer pointed to my server. So when I make a new Teamspeak, I make sure to assign it the same static (in AWS).

 

But in a case of just using one to access the internet and play games - No domains or servers.

 

It's more useful for a dynamic IP in the case I'm talking about because if someone does grab your IP somehow, it's easy fixed.

But if you've got servers and crap, you'd be better off with a static IP.

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33 minutes ago, EvilCat70 said:

But in a case of just using one to access the internet and play games - No domains or servers.

 

It's more useful for a dynamic IP in the case I'm talking about because if someone does grab your IP somehow, it's easy fixed.

But if you've got servers and crap, you'd be better off with a static IP.

You are right that for the average user, dynamic IP makes more sense and may in fact be preferable. Assigning a static IP to a customer is slightly more work for an ISP than dynamic IPs (someone has to spend 2 minutes setting up the static IP(s) for an account) and it means that IP has to be taken out of the pool available for dynamic IPs (in practice most ISPs maintain seperate IP sets for dynamic and static customers). Since the ISP has to do slightly more work for a static IP, and since static IPs are only good for people running servers, which is defined as a business use of internet, and people running a server usually use more bandwidth than regular users and are more open to DOS/DDOS attack, ISPs charge more if you want a static IP. If there is any ISP that does things opposite this, please let me know as I would seriously consider moving to that country. 

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4 minutes ago, brwainer said:

You are right that for the average user, dynamic IP makes more sense and may in fact be preferable. Assigning a static IP to a customer is slightly more work for an ISP than dynamic IPs (someone has to spend 2 minutes setting up the static IP(s) for an account) and it means that IP has to be taken out of the pool available for dynamic IPs (in practice most ISPs maintain seperate IP sets for dynamic and static customers). Since the ISP has to do slightly more work for a static IP, and since static IPs are only good for people running servers, which is defined as a business use of internet, and people running a server usually use more bandwidth than regular users and are more open to DOS/DDOS attack, ISPs charge more if you want a static IP. If there is any ISP that does things opposite this, please let me know as I would seriously consider moving to that country. 

 

Apparently Sky Broadband (my ISP) uses dynamic IPs - That must be a big bunch of lies, I restarted my router and no IP was changed...

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