I have unlimited cellular data on my phone but not if I use it as a hotspot.
I have unlimited cellular data on my phone but not if I use it as a hotspot.


What is the difference between cellular data being used on my phone and cellular data being used on my notebook? Data is data.
You're viewing a single thread.
MonkderZweite @feddit.ch They can detect you using your phone as hotspot? Creepy.
24 3 Replyjkrtn @lemmy.ml The phone reports it, yeah, it is creepy. Should be illegal to even have the knowledge to differentiate.
24 1 Replymichael_palmer @lemmy.sdf.org TTL is a part of TCP/IP.
2 0 Reply
dan @upvote.au
Sometimes it's based on the TTL of packets. TTL for hotspot clients will be one less than TTL for directly using data on the phone, since the phone is acting as a router, which adds an extra hop.
I think running a HTTP proxy or VPN server on the phone would mask it (since the connections would then be made by the phone directly), but I've never tried.
13 0 Replymichael_palmer @lemmy.sdf.org Android phones don't share VPN connections through the hotspot
1 0 Replydan @upvote.au
Ahh - that's unfortunate. A HTTP proxy should work though.
1 0 Reply
kent_eh @lemmy.ca It's not hard to detect when the standard includes the phone indicating what it's doing to the carrier.
6 0 ReplyFlying Squid @lemmy.world OP
Very creepy.
4 0 Replyhumbletightband @lemmy.dbzer0.com My provider used MTU as a reference. I simply changed it in hotspot settings and was happy about that
3 0 Reply