Interesting, some hacker trying to attack my cam server at port 30,000 and omirr. IP 204.45.65.130, blocked via dd-wrt router iptables.
Looks like they are collecting servers with webcams or something. Nice try. Try a proxy, Einstein.
IP: 204.45.65.130
Country: United States
State: Illinois
City: Woodstock
Postcode: 60098
Latitude: 42.3222
Longitude: -88.4671
ISP: FDCservers.net
Organization: FDCservers.net
Domains of IP:
1. abcd.ipcam.hk
2. ache.easynp.cn
3. app.easynp.cn
4. app.ipcam.hk
5. demo.ipcam.hk
6. help.ipcam.hk
7. mob.ipcam.hk
8. server.ipcam.hk
9. user.ipcam.hk
10. www.easynp.cn
11. www.easynp.com
hmmm... Seems like the ip is a destination ip. And my IPCAM is designed to reach it! Oh well, whatever they got planning for my webcam, I'm blocking it:
iptables -I FORWARD -d 204.45.65.130 -j logdrop
Seems that all this comes from the DDNS Service Settings of the IPCAM config page.
I need help. I have 2 ip cameras that I monitor when I
travel. They quit connecting
via ****.ipcam.hk. When I check them out using the software everything looks fine
but I can't access them over the net anymore. any ideas?
thanks, Dennis
Dear Dennis,
if you are using some domain ***.ipcam.hk as the link to your camera, the first thing to check is if the ip address of your cam is updated to the domain name.
Find out what ip your camera is on. Then check it by typing the ip number into the browser instead of the domain name ***.ipcam.hk.
Also make sure your cam is not connected behind a router. Otherwise, make sure your router forward the right ports in the settings.