IPTV USERS: Firestick question

Deezz

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
If I take my Firestick/cube off my TV and take it to another TV, will the IPTV that I loaded on my device work on another TV away from my home?
 
If I take my Firestick/cube off my TV and take it to another TV, will the IPTV that I loaded on my device work on another TV away from my home?
No, not at all because your stuff will still be on your firestick as long as you installed everything before you moved it into another room or tv.

I've done it plenty of times with no problems.
 
Just make sure you ain't streaming it on more than one tv unless you paid for multiple connections.
 
No, not at all because your stuff will still be on your firestick as long as you installed everything before you moved it into another room or tv.

I've done it plenty of times with no problems.
Yeah, but I'm taking it to another home.
 
Depends on the IPTV provider.. with most providers you'll be fine, but some keep of track of # of devices by home IP address
Well he should contact the person who sold him the service to make sure he's on the safe side to use it in another home.

But I've done that with no issues.
 
definitely, I have family using my iptv accts in different states. I have 5 connections with 3 different providers and all services aren’t ip locked
Factz, as long as the accounts aren't locked then you're gucci to use them iptv service however way you want it being in a different households.
 
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Timber Wolfe, a principal at Dark Wolfe Consulting, found in his research. He said 40% of apps for these devices were infected with malware that can take over a camera or microphone on the network within the first hour.

One app for pirated movies and live sports, called Mobdro, immediately forwarded his Wi-Fi network name and password to servers in Indonesia, he said. Other apps would collect data on the user, including photos and videos on the network, and upload them to the server. In one case, an app collected more than a terabyte of data after getting connected to Wolfe's network.

These apps offered streams on movies that were still in theaters during the study time, like Aquaman and Green Book, as well as access to pay-per-views like UFC fights. One app, called "Free Netflix," used a network of stolen Netflix accounts that would constantly rotate so that hacked users would not become suspicious, Wolfe said.

In the background, these apps were scanning victims' networks, looking for open ports to infect other devices, he said.

"Once you start using these rogue apps, nothing is free, there's always some angle to them," Wolfe said.

In one case, when the DCA arranged to buy one of the devices off Craigslist, the seller came out of the Department of Labor building in Washington, DC, to hand off the goods. On hacker forums, the researchers found that criminals online were discussing ways to exploit this malware.
 
I’ve been saying, if you’re going to use these things you had better set up a VLAN to isolate that device from the rest of your network.

That’s why the price is so cheap. They’re actually making most of their money by selling your hacked data, accounts and passwords.

And to make it worse, when you take these things to your family and friends houses, you're putting them at risk as well.
 
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it will always be a way to get this shit

we had the cable box de-scramblers back in the day

then we had the hacked Direct TV satellite cards........that shit was fire till they changed to cards

now it's IPTV streaming...good luck catching them all..
 
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