Subj : Why does address change+ To : Joe Delahaye From : Markus Reschke Date : Sat Sep 03 2016 12:20:06 Hi Joe! Sep 02 20:18 2016, Joe Delahaye wrote to Markus Reschke: JD> I dont know. I am no expert in this. I would be interested in JD> learning more, but at this point, things get a little difficult. MS is doing it their own non-standard way, as always. Shame on them! They generate a random interface ID instead of using the EUI-64 method, and they use only that random ID. JD> Somebody sent me a set of Netsh commands to use to shut down various JD> things, and I have done that. I save that as a file. JD> netsh int ipv6 set global randomizeidentifiers=disabled JD> netsh int ipv6 set privacy state=disabled JD> netsh int ipv6 isatap set state disabled JD> netsh int ipv6 6to4 set state disabled JD> netsh int teredo set state disable Those changes are only temporary as long as the PC runs. To disable the random interface ID persistently: netsh interface ipv6 set privacy state=disabled store=active netsh interface ipv6 set privacy state=disabled store=persistent netsh interface ipv6 set global randomizeidentifiers=disabled store=active netsh interface ipv6 set global randomizeidentifiers=disabled store=persistent ciao, Markus --- * Origin: *** theca tabellaria *** (2:240/1661) .