iOS 14 introduces private addresses
-
What idiot came up with his (pardon my French)? That means organizations using 802.1x MAC authentication will have a major headache on their hands. Read somewhere else it changes every 24 hours ;( for now I enabled Deny unknown clients every user will squeal
https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT211227
-
Yup, fun.
Android does it too.
My understanding here is that they will use the same MAC on known wifi connections but will initially randomly generate it. That way when searching for available networks the client cannot be tracked by MAC.
Discussed here: https://forum.netgate.com/topic/156928/private-mac-addresses-in-ios14
Probably better to continue that thread.Steve
-
@Qinn
You can deactivate it on SSID base. So what's the big trouble? -
@Qinn said in iOS 14 introduces private addresses:
That means organizations using 802.1x MAC authentication will have a major headache on their hands. Read somewhere else it changes every 24 hours
I created a new connection with a random MAC on my Pixel 2 13 days ago. It still connects. Did you read about that with Android or iPhone?
-
@stephenw10 Maybe merge this post or close it?
-
@viragomann said in iOS 14 introduces private addresses:
@Qinn
You can deactivate it on SSID base. So what's the big trouble?A significant number of users will not open the settings app. When things don't work they will simply panic. Would be better opt-in than opt-out.
-
@jwj Exactly many people have no idea what a mac address is and switch into panic mode.
-
Ok, take further discussion of this here please:
https://forum.netgate.com/topic/156928/private-mac-addresses-in-ios14