Unintentionally activated MAC filtering with no connected devices.
Unintentionally activated MAC filtering with no connected devices.
Hello. I set up MAC filtering with no added addresses, which is confusing. Now I can’t reach the 192.168.1.1 admin panel, even over a LAN cable. I’m stuck because my ISP has changed several settings—like user ID and password—that I don’t control. They won’t appear until next Monday. Can I still access the admin panel and disable it? Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
MAC filtering options for hardwired equipment are available, though I haven’t encountered them in typical consumer home setups. They’re usually applied to wireless devices only. My first thought would have been to restart the router, but there’s another approach. If you remember the MAC address assigned to the device you set up on the router, you can mimic that address on one of your wired clients. This might allow you to bypass the filter and regain access.
The problem is that no device is set up in the router for whitelisting. It has MAC filtering active, and currently no devices are added.
I misunderstood what I read. Usually consumer devices only handle Wi-Fi filtering, not MAC filtering on LAN ports. You need a specific commercial solution for that.