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Will I be more secure with my own router behind my ISP's router?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Does an ISP have admin access to your modem/router?ISP modem/router, how do I enable Bridged Mode and use my own router?Configure DD-WRT router behind a Cisco cable modemUse my own router if ISP supplid does not support bridgeHow do i properly configure Bridge Mode on a modem/router?Accessing a bridged DSL modem from behind a Linksys routerOn an ADSL modem set in bridge mode is the bandwidth limit tied to the physical device—the modem—itself?Port forward Apache behind router and modemAccess Devices on Two Routers with Different SubnetsWhy no internet connection with pfsense behind modem in bridge mode?Port-forwarding through modem and routerISP modem/router, how do I enable Bridged Mode and use my own router?





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2















My ISP has been accessing my router, (to fix or update something), they accidentally changed my SSID and thanks to that I realize the following:




  1. I have no control over the device, no telnet, some fixed values, etc.

  2. If I need to restore from factory, I would need to call them.

  3. Passwords are unencrypted.

  4. I feel my own devices, connected to this router, potentially vulnerable.


I found this question very relatable:



Does an ISP have admin access to your modem/router?



Since I can't replace the device entirely with my own, I thought about putting my own router behind theirs.



Here is mentioned the bridge alternative, which I don't fully understand:



ISP modem/router, how do I enable Bridged Mode and use my own router?



None of this routers have a bridge mode, so I did the following:



I connected my own router via Ethernet to the ISP’s router.
Then in my router the wan is:





  • IPv4: 192.168.2.10


  • Subnet: 255.255.255.0


  • Gateway (ISP’s LAN): 192.168.2.1


I also disabled UPnP and dynamic DNS from both, and Wi-Fi from the ISP’s router.



So will the devices connected to my router be secured from anyone inside of the ISP’s router?



Could someone tell me if this is a bridged connection, or its difference from a bridged connection?










share|improve this question









New contributor




tony is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Please edit your question: What is the make and model number of the router your ISP is providing? Most ISP provided routers allow the modem to be used in “bridge mode” so if we know the make and model we can help you figure out how to set it up as such.

    – JakeGould
    6 mins ago


















2















My ISP has been accessing my router, (to fix or update something), they accidentally changed my SSID and thanks to that I realize the following:




  1. I have no control over the device, no telnet, some fixed values, etc.

  2. If I need to restore from factory, I would need to call them.

  3. Passwords are unencrypted.

  4. I feel my own devices, connected to this router, potentially vulnerable.


I found this question very relatable:



Does an ISP have admin access to your modem/router?



Since I can't replace the device entirely with my own, I thought about putting my own router behind theirs.



Here is mentioned the bridge alternative, which I don't fully understand:



ISP modem/router, how do I enable Bridged Mode and use my own router?



None of this routers have a bridge mode, so I did the following:



I connected my own router via Ethernet to the ISP’s router.
Then in my router the wan is:





  • IPv4: 192.168.2.10


  • Subnet: 255.255.255.0


  • Gateway (ISP’s LAN): 192.168.2.1


I also disabled UPnP and dynamic DNS from both, and Wi-Fi from the ISP’s router.



So will the devices connected to my router be secured from anyone inside of the ISP’s router?



Could someone tell me if this is a bridged connection, or its difference from a bridged connection?










share|improve this question









New contributor




tony is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Please edit your question: What is the make and model number of the router your ISP is providing? Most ISP provided routers allow the modem to be used in “bridge mode” so if we know the make and model we can help you figure out how to set it up as such.

    – JakeGould
    6 mins ago














2












2








2








My ISP has been accessing my router, (to fix or update something), they accidentally changed my SSID and thanks to that I realize the following:




  1. I have no control over the device, no telnet, some fixed values, etc.

  2. If I need to restore from factory, I would need to call them.

  3. Passwords are unencrypted.

  4. I feel my own devices, connected to this router, potentially vulnerable.


I found this question very relatable:



Does an ISP have admin access to your modem/router?



Since I can't replace the device entirely with my own, I thought about putting my own router behind theirs.



Here is mentioned the bridge alternative, which I don't fully understand:



ISP modem/router, how do I enable Bridged Mode and use my own router?



None of this routers have a bridge mode, so I did the following:



I connected my own router via Ethernet to the ISP’s router.
Then in my router the wan is:





  • IPv4: 192.168.2.10


  • Subnet: 255.255.255.0


  • Gateway (ISP’s LAN): 192.168.2.1


I also disabled UPnP and dynamic DNS from both, and Wi-Fi from the ISP’s router.



So will the devices connected to my router be secured from anyone inside of the ISP’s router?



Could someone tell me if this is a bridged connection, or its difference from a bridged connection?










share|improve this question









New contributor




tony is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












My ISP has been accessing my router, (to fix or update something), they accidentally changed my SSID and thanks to that I realize the following:




  1. I have no control over the device, no telnet, some fixed values, etc.

  2. If I need to restore from factory, I would need to call them.

  3. Passwords are unencrypted.

  4. I feel my own devices, connected to this router, potentially vulnerable.


I found this question very relatable:



Does an ISP have admin access to your modem/router?



Since I can't replace the device entirely with my own, I thought about putting my own router behind theirs.



Here is mentioned the bridge alternative, which I don't fully understand:



ISP modem/router, how do I enable Bridged Mode and use my own router?



None of this routers have a bridge mode, so I did the following:



I connected my own router via Ethernet to the ISP’s router.
Then in my router the wan is:





  • IPv4: 192.168.2.10


  • Subnet: 255.255.255.0


  • Gateway (ISP’s LAN): 192.168.2.1


I also disabled UPnP and dynamic DNS from both, and Wi-Fi from the ISP’s router.



So will the devices connected to my router be secured from anyone inside of the ISP’s router?



Could someone tell me if this is a bridged connection, or its difference from a bridged connection?







networking router security isp






share|improve this question









New contributor




tony is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




tony is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 8 mins ago









JakeGould

33k10100142




33k10100142






New contributor




tony is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 1 hour ago









tonytony

113




113




New contributor




tony is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





tony is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






tony is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • Please edit your question: What is the make and model number of the router your ISP is providing? Most ISP provided routers allow the modem to be used in “bridge mode” so if we know the make and model we can help you figure out how to set it up as such.

    – JakeGould
    6 mins ago



















  • Please edit your question: What is the make and model number of the router your ISP is providing? Most ISP provided routers allow the modem to be used in “bridge mode” so if we know the make and model we can help you figure out how to set it up as such.

    – JakeGould
    6 mins ago

















Please edit your question: What is the make and model number of the router your ISP is providing? Most ISP provided routers allow the modem to be used in “bridge mode” so if we know the make and model we can help you figure out how to set it up as such.

– JakeGould
6 mins ago





Please edit your question: What is the make and model number of the router your ISP is providing? Most ISP provided routers allow the modem to be used in “bridge mode” so if we know the make and model we can help you figure out how to set it up as such.

– JakeGould
6 mins ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















2














Not 100% sure but TR-069 might be the standard involved that is allowing your ISP to access your CPE (modem/router) and get information from it. Probably all DSL modems you buy and certainly any you get from the ISP will be TR-069 enabled.



I have cable (DOCSIS) and bought my own modem, without a built in router, and then bought a separate router. This is a good setup if you do not want the ISP to do anything with your equipment.



DSL is different. I believe all consumer level DSL modems will have a built-in router. The way to disable the router part of a DSL modem/router is to enable bridge mode. Then add your own router.



What you're doing is kinda the right thing to do if you can't change your situation.



It's not bridged. Basically you created (or should be creating) a separate network between your ISP and your devices. Done this way, the only thing the ISP can see is anything in the middle network, which ought to only contain your DSL device and your home router.



If your router has TTL spoofing, enable it, then your ISP can't use TTL to detect if the router is speaking or devices behind it.



Here's the right way to do what you want. It's a crappy MSPaint diagram, but hopefully is clear enough.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer































    0














    About "bridge mode"





    1. "Bridge mode" on ISP "router" is important if You get Public IP from ISP.



      It allow to install this Public IP on Your router WAN port.



      And if You ask You ISP about it, ask something like:




      "I want to set my public IP on WAN port of my router, how it possible?"




    2. Bridge mode can be useful on some ADSL/cable modems-routers, which CPU not too powerful. It allow to establish PPPoE connection from Your powerful router and remove performance bottleneck and ISP router hungs.







    share|improve this answer

































      -1














      I would suggest using your own router hooked directly to the cable modem/router, preferably your own. This would likely save you money because you wouldn't be renting the modem from your provider plus you would have complete control over your router.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      Netjunky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.





















        Your Answer








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        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        2














        Not 100% sure but TR-069 might be the standard involved that is allowing your ISP to access your CPE (modem/router) and get information from it. Probably all DSL modems you buy and certainly any you get from the ISP will be TR-069 enabled.



        I have cable (DOCSIS) and bought my own modem, without a built in router, and then bought a separate router. This is a good setup if you do not want the ISP to do anything with your equipment.



        DSL is different. I believe all consumer level DSL modems will have a built-in router. The way to disable the router part of a DSL modem/router is to enable bridge mode. Then add your own router.



        What you're doing is kinda the right thing to do if you can't change your situation.



        It's not bridged. Basically you created (or should be creating) a separate network between your ISP and your devices. Done this way, the only thing the ISP can see is anything in the middle network, which ought to only contain your DSL device and your home router.



        If your router has TTL spoofing, enable it, then your ISP can't use TTL to detect if the router is speaking or devices behind it.



        Here's the right way to do what you want. It's a crappy MSPaint diagram, but hopefully is clear enough.



        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer




























          2














          Not 100% sure but TR-069 might be the standard involved that is allowing your ISP to access your CPE (modem/router) and get information from it. Probably all DSL modems you buy and certainly any you get from the ISP will be TR-069 enabled.



          I have cable (DOCSIS) and bought my own modem, without a built in router, and then bought a separate router. This is a good setup if you do not want the ISP to do anything with your equipment.



          DSL is different. I believe all consumer level DSL modems will have a built-in router. The way to disable the router part of a DSL modem/router is to enable bridge mode. Then add your own router.



          What you're doing is kinda the right thing to do if you can't change your situation.



          It's not bridged. Basically you created (or should be creating) a separate network between your ISP and your devices. Done this way, the only thing the ISP can see is anything in the middle network, which ought to only contain your DSL device and your home router.



          If your router has TTL spoofing, enable it, then your ISP can't use TTL to detect if the router is speaking or devices behind it.



          Here's the right way to do what you want. It's a crappy MSPaint diagram, but hopefully is clear enough.



          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer


























            2












            2








            2







            Not 100% sure but TR-069 might be the standard involved that is allowing your ISP to access your CPE (modem/router) and get information from it. Probably all DSL modems you buy and certainly any you get from the ISP will be TR-069 enabled.



            I have cable (DOCSIS) and bought my own modem, without a built in router, and then bought a separate router. This is a good setup if you do not want the ISP to do anything with your equipment.



            DSL is different. I believe all consumer level DSL modems will have a built-in router. The way to disable the router part of a DSL modem/router is to enable bridge mode. Then add your own router.



            What you're doing is kinda the right thing to do if you can't change your situation.



            It's not bridged. Basically you created (or should be creating) a separate network between your ISP and your devices. Done this way, the only thing the ISP can see is anything in the middle network, which ought to only contain your DSL device and your home router.



            If your router has TTL spoofing, enable it, then your ISP can't use TTL to detect if the router is speaking or devices behind it.



            Here's the right way to do what you want. It's a crappy MSPaint diagram, but hopefully is clear enough.



            enter image description here






            share|improve this answer













            Not 100% sure but TR-069 might be the standard involved that is allowing your ISP to access your CPE (modem/router) and get information from it. Probably all DSL modems you buy and certainly any you get from the ISP will be TR-069 enabled.



            I have cable (DOCSIS) and bought my own modem, without a built in router, and then bought a separate router. This is a good setup if you do not want the ISP to do anything with your equipment.



            DSL is different. I believe all consumer level DSL modems will have a built-in router. The way to disable the router part of a DSL modem/router is to enable bridge mode. Then add your own router.



            What you're doing is kinda the right thing to do if you can't change your situation.



            It's not bridged. Basically you created (or should be creating) a separate network between your ISP and your devices. Done this way, the only thing the ISP can see is anything in the middle network, which ought to only contain your DSL device and your home router.



            If your router has TTL spoofing, enable it, then your ISP can't use TTL to detect if the router is speaking or devices behind it.



            Here's the right way to do what you want. It's a crappy MSPaint diagram, but hopefully is clear enough.



            enter image description here







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 1 hour ago









            LawrenceCLawrenceC

            59.7k11103181




            59.7k11103181

























                0














                About "bridge mode"





                1. "Bridge mode" on ISP "router" is important if You get Public IP from ISP.



                  It allow to install this Public IP on Your router WAN port.



                  And if You ask You ISP about it, ask something like:




                  "I want to set my public IP on WAN port of my router, how it possible?"




                2. Bridge mode can be useful on some ADSL/cable modems-routers, which CPU not too powerful. It allow to establish PPPoE connection from Your powerful router and remove performance bottleneck and ISP router hungs.







                share|improve this answer






























                  0














                  About "bridge mode"





                  1. "Bridge mode" on ISP "router" is important if You get Public IP from ISP.



                    It allow to install this Public IP on Your router WAN port.



                    And if You ask You ISP about it, ask something like:




                    "I want to set my public IP on WAN port of my router, how it possible?"




                  2. Bridge mode can be useful on some ADSL/cable modems-routers, which CPU not too powerful. It allow to establish PPPoE connection from Your powerful router and remove performance bottleneck and ISP router hungs.







                  share|improve this answer




























                    0












                    0








                    0







                    About "bridge mode"





                    1. "Bridge mode" on ISP "router" is important if You get Public IP from ISP.



                      It allow to install this Public IP on Your router WAN port.



                      And if You ask You ISP about it, ask something like:




                      "I want to set my public IP on WAN port of my router, how it possible?"




                    2. Bridge mode can be useful on some ADSL/cable modems-routers, which CPU not too powerful. It allow to establish PPPoE connection from Your powerful router and remove performance bottleneck and ISP router hungs.







                    share|improve this answer















                    About "bridge mode"





                    1. "Bridge mode" on ISP "router" is important if You get Public IP from ISP.



                      It allow to install this Public IP on Your router WAN port.



                      And if You ask You ISP about it, ask something like:




                      "I want to set my public IP on WAN port of my router, how it possible?"




                    2. Bridge mode can be useful on some ADSL/cable modems-routers, which CPU not too powerful. It allow to establish PPPoE connection from Your powerful router and remove performance bottleneck and ISP router hungs.








                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited 8 mins ago









                    JakeGould

                    33k10100142




                    33k10100142










                    answered 18 mins ago









                    Mikhail MoskalevMikhail Moskalev

                    1,5531113




                    1,5531113























                        -1














                        I would suggest using your own router hooked directly to the cable modem/router, preferably your own. This would likely save you money because you wouldn't be renting the modem from your provider plus you would have complete control over your router.






                        share|improve this answer








                        New contributor




                        Netjunky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                        Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                          -1














                          I would suggest using your own router hooked directly to the cable modem/router, preferably your own. This would likely save you money because you wouldn't be renting the modem from your provider plus you would have complete control over your router.






                          share|improve this answer








                          New contributor




                          Netjunky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                          Check out our Code of Conduct.























                            -1












                            -1








                            -1







                            I would suggest using your own router hooked directly to the cable modem/router, preferably your own. This would likely save you money because you wouldn't be renting the modem from your provider plus you would have complete control over your router.






                            share|improve this answer








                            New contributor




                            Netjunky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                            Check out our Code of Conduct.










                            I would suggest using your own router hooked directly to the cable modem/router, preferably your own. This would likely save you money because you wouldn't be renting the modem from your provider plus you would have complete control over your router.







                            share|improve this answer








                            New contributor




                            Netjunky is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                            Check out our Code of Conduct.









                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer






                            New contributor




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                            answered 1 hour ago









                            NetjunkyNetjunky

                            11




                            11




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