Why doesn’t every computer have 256 char domain name, along with a private key to prove it is the sole owner of the address?

For those technically inclined: With VOIP I can get phone calls even without cell service, even behind a NAT. Why is the network designed in such a way where that is possible, but I can’t buy a static address that will persist across networks endpoint changes (e.g. laptop connecting to a new unconfigured wifi connection) such that I can initiate a connection to my laptop while it is behind a NAT.

Edits:

  • Yes, it would be a privacy nightmare, I want to know why it didnt turn out that way
  • When I say phone number, I mean including area/country code
  • AFAIK IP addresses (even static public ones) are not equivlent to phone numbers. I don’t get a new phone number every time I connect to a new cell tower. Even if a static IP is assigned to a device, my understanding is that connecting the device to a new uncontrolled WiFi, especially a router with a NAT, will make it so that people who try to connect to the static IP will simply fail.
  • No, MAC addresses are not equivalent phone numbers. 1. Phone numbers have one unique owner, MAC addresses can have many owners because they can be changed at any time to any thing on most laptops. 2. A message can’t be sent directly to a MAC address in the same way as a phone number
  • Yes, IMEI is unique, but my laptop doesn’t have one and even if it did its not the same as an eSim or sim card. We can send a message to an activated Sim, we can’t send a message to an IMEI or serial number
  • JakenVeina@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    They do, it’s called an IP address.

    Phones get numbers assigned to them by a cell service provider, in order to communicate on their network, which is basically the exact process for computers and IP addresses.

    If you’re asking about the equivalent of like a SIM card, in the computer/internet world, that’s handled at higher layers, by digital certificates. And again, the process is almost exactly the same, except they don’t (usually) get put on physical chips.

    • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      IP address is really the best comparison here. Some computers share an IP just like entire call centers may share the same phone number. And neither IP addresses and packets nor phone numbers are properly authenticated without additional enforcement systems.

      Internal networks exist for computers and phones. It’s a nice parallel.

        • lemmyng@lemmy.ca
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          Sure they can. If you put a network behind a router they will share an egress/ingress IP. And there are certain high availability setups where computers share IPs in the same subnet for hot/standby failover.

          • JesterIzDead@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            Yes, but no. The public IP is that of the router, which NATs packets to each host, each of which must have a unique private IP. The public IP does not reference or identity hosts behind the router. And that’s not how HA works. Only one host is assigned the active IP at one time.

            • meteokr@community.adiquaints.moe
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              5 months ago

              So computers can share IP’s then right? By your example they are sharing their public IP. From the perspective of the server you are connecting to, all the machines on your LAN have the same IP. Same way multiple physical phones can be connected to a single landline, all those phones share the same number.

            • lemmyng@lemmy.ca
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              When you do call routing with a PBX each phone has an unique extension, equivalent to the private IP of each host.

              Oh, and there’s also anycast, which is literally multiple active devices sharing an IP.

              • JesterIzDead@lemm.ee
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                5 months ago

                You’d have to know more about BGP to know any cast doesn’t function as you think it does

          • JesterIzDead@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            Yes, but no. The public IP is that of the router, which NATs packets to each host, each of which must have a unique private IP. The public IP does not reference or identity hosts behind the router.

    • 800XL@lemmy.world
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      Except you can spoof an IP address or get another one from the ISP just by asking. You can spoof a MAC address too.

      Intel introduced unique processor id’s back in the late 90s.

      • lemmyng@lemmy.ca
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        5 months ago

        Phone numbers can be spoofed, and SIM cards can be cloned. The analogy stands.

    • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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      Cell phones don’t get a new phone number every time they switch cell towers, so why do laptops.

      Its not like I can write down the IP address of my friends laptop so I can send it a message once he gets to a new city. Right?

      • lemmyng@lemmy.ca
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        Laptops don’t get a new IP address every time they switch from one AP to another in the same network either. Your cell phone will get a new IP address if it switches to a different cell network.

        • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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          I can get VOIP calls behind a NAT without cell service. I’m asking how is that possible. Is the router somehow part of the same AP as cell service?

          • lemmyng@lemmy.ca
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            Whoa, that’s a sizeable edit to the post! Regardless the answer is pretty straightforward: your VOIP client (either the device if you have one or the software) is connected to a VOIP service which acts like a gateway for your client. Since the client initiated the connection to the gateway and is keeping it alive, you don’t need to make any network changes. Once the connection is established, standard SIP call flows (you can Google that for flow diagrams) are followed.

            So no, you router is not part of the cell service. The VOIP provider is part of a phone service that receives calls and routes them for you, just like the cell towers are part of a telephony provider that routes calls through the appropriate tower.

            • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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              5 months ago

              Finally :D thank you so much!

              So basically VOIP is “cheating” because its not actually handled by the network directly, the phone company pays for always-online servers, and phone(s) reach out to those server every time they change networks, in order for servers to be able to route calls to them.

              Which also means! it is possible to do the same thing for computers, but it requires having

              1. A static IP
              2. An always online server
              3. The device needs a daemon that tries to connect to an always online server, and authenticates itself
              4. That server needs to manually reroute traffic (through a VPN or some other means) from the static IP address to the device, wherever it might be

              Which also explains why general network providers wouldn’t want to create the infrastructure. Even if universal addresses were given to each device, which simplifies DHCP and address-leasing, and shortens time it takes to handshake with the network, all of that is less of a cost than the infrastructure needed track of devices as they change networks. (And that’s on top of ISP’s being slow to change from the legacy approach of local networks and desktops).

              ^ which is more the conversation I wanted to have but didnt really get with this post.

              Thats a sizable edit!

              Yeah 😅 I didnt want it to be this complicated of a question, but I didnt see how else to explain that current addressing systems don’t meet the same need as a phone number.

              • lemmyng@lemmy.ca
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                1. A static IP is actually not necessary, but what you need is a consistent identifier. For the server, that’s typically a DNS address, but for clients and peer to peer networks there’s other ways to identify devices, usually tied to an account or some other key kept on the device.
                2. For centralised communications yes, you would need an always online server. For decentralised networks, you just need a sufficient amount of online peers, but each individual peer does not need to be always online.
                3. Pretty much, yes. Even push notifications on cell phones work this way.
                4. Route, yes. Manually. VPN is usually not necessary. In modern web-based services this is typically done with websockets, which are client-initiated (so the client address can change), and which allow two-way communication and typically only require a keepalive packet from the client every minute or so.

                There’s other reasons why universal addressing is not done - privacy, network segmentation, resiliency, security, etc. And while IPv6 proponents do like to claim that local networks wouldn’t be strictly necessary (which is technically true), local networks will still be wanted by many. Tying this back to phone numbers - phone numbers work because there’s an implicit trust in the telcos, and conversely there’s built in central control. It also helps that it’s only a very domain specific implementation - phone communication specifications don’t change very often. On computer networks, a lot of work has been done to reduce the reliance on a central trust authority. Nowadays, DNS and SSL registries are pretty much the last bastion of such an authority, with a lot of research and work having gone into being able to safely communicate through untrusted layers: GPG, TOR, IPFS, TLS, etc.

      • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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        Its not like I can write down the IP address of my friends laptop so I can send it a message once he gets to a new city.

        With static IPs that’s possible, but you already do that when you email them already.

        • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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          I can send a message to the IP address but AFAIK the message won’t get to him because he will almost certainly have a new address when he connects to the airport WiFi in the new city.

    • Guest_User@lemmy.world
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      You will always be able to spoof your MAC address if needed. I don’t see the standard ever changing enough to prevent that.

    • pinchcramp@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      I don’t think that’s something that needs to be fixed. Your phone (and probably your computer) can randomize its MAC address every time it connects to a new WiFi to make it harder to track you.

    • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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      I’m shocked this answer has so many upvotes. No, a MAC address is not close to a phone number. No two people have the same phone number, and I can’t just edit my phone number to be someone else’s number.

      • “two network interfaces connected to two different networks can share the same MAC address”
      • “Many network interfaces, however, support changing their MAC addresses”

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAC_address

      • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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        You ask a “no stupid” question then try to call out an answer? Bold move cotton.

        Sure you can change your phone number, it’s called spoofing, or just call your provider and get a new one, sometimes they charge sometimes they don’t. So why are you claiming it’s not possible?

        People have the same phone numbers, that’s why area codes exist, that’s kinda the same thing as a provider and a MAC address, no…?

        Edit well then.

        • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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          Fair, I could have said fully qualified number, including country code.

          And also fair, instead of saying a MAC could be edited, I should’ve said each phone number has one global owner, while each MAC address could have many owners.

          Corrections have been made 👍

  • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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    Lack of demand.

    Phones having unique unalterable numbers was never an intentional feature desired by users, just a limitation of the available technology.

    Computer network cards do have such a number, their MAC address, but modern ones can scramble it to avoid being tracked, without any loss of ability to be reached by everyone you want to be reached by.

  • Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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    Along with the other comments on UDID, IMEI and MAC, I’d just like to point out that phones don’t have phone numbers.

    On land lines, the number is assigned to the line that goes to your house from the local operations center; on mobile phones, the number is linked by your carrier to THEIR SIM card that you stick in your phone.

    eSIM almost gets there; instead of a physical card linked to the phone number, all the logic and secrets are stored in a secure enclave on your phone and THAT is linked to the number, which is in a directory managed by your carrier. It’s linked to the phone itself because of the phone’s IMEI.

    • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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      Sure, I’ll change the title to say “phones have unique phone number (b/c sim cards), why don’t computers have an equivalent?” I didnt mean one phone == one phone number.

      With VOIP I can get phone calls even without cell service, even behind a NAT. My question is why is the network designed in such a way where that is possible, but I can’t buy a static address that will persist across networks endpoint changes (e.g. new wifi connection) such that I can initiate a connection to my laptop while it is behind a NAT.

        • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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          AFAIK static public-facing IP addresses are limited to a physical location. It would work if my laptop never left my house but as soon as I take it to the airport its no longer accessible. People who try to connect to the static ip would just get a message saying the address timed out.

      • Sethayy@sh.itjust.works
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        For the laptop thing you realistically could by a WAN IP per device, itd just be expensivr and also a massive security issue DMZ’ing all your devices

      • Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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        All you have to do is buy your own IP, and you can use it whenever you want. You don’t have to use one given to you by the upstream gateway via DHCP or BootP.

        Of course, you need to make sure the upstream router is configured to not drop addresses it didn’t assign itself.

        • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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          Even paying for a static IP its not like a phone number which is discoverable behind a NAT without extra router configuration.

  • ArbiterXero@lemmy.world
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    It’s called a MAC address.

    The problem with it is mostly routing.

    The osi model has 7 layers of connection to form a proper internet connection.

    The MAC address exists but doesn’t leave the physical network. The MAC address is used to physically connect your computer to the router, and it defines your piece of hardware.

    The IP address can change, because your computer can connect to different networks.

    If you tried to route everything with a MAC address, (which isn’t possible, but for arguments sake we will pretend it is) the problem is that when you take your phone with its MAC address off your wifi and on to your work wifi, Where would the registry be? How would the Internet know how to find your phone? Do you just log into one giant global registry so that everyone can find your phone when they are trying to communicate with it? That would be a giant fucking database and everyone would always be trying to use it.

    Routing is a big and complex problem, and these things didn’t work with ipv4

    They do work better with IPv6. IPv6 adresses don’t need to change like ipv4 for a bunch of reasons.

    From a philosophical level, the Internet was designed for people to be anonymous and make relatively anonymous connections. You wanted to be flexible enough that you can just be assigned a new number and work with that new number quickly.

    This is a really simple explanation, and I got some basic facts wrong just for ease of understanding, but the principals are correct.

    • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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      If you tried to route everything with a MAC address, (which isn’t possible, but for arguments sake we will pretend it is) the problem is that when you take your phone with its MAC address off your wifi and on to your work wifi, Where would the registry be? How would the Internet know how to find your phone? Do you just log into one giant global registry so that everyone can find your phone when they are trying to communicate with it? That would be a giant fucking database and everyone would always be trying to use it.

      This is a solved issue called EUI-64 IPv6 addressing. It is a privacy nightmare.

    • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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      Every phone number has one owner, but MAC addresses can have many owners. They’re categorically different.

      How would the internet know how to find your phone?

      The same way phone calls try to find a phone when its powered off. Attempt, and then fail under a timeout.

      Where would the registery be?

      Same place as the phone number registry. Or the domain name registry.

      That would be one giant database

      Yep the domain name registry and cell phone registry very much are AFAIK

      • ArbiterXero@lemmy.world
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        The domain registry is NOT, and it’s categorised by various tld’s the scope of the routing is MUCH higher traffic.

        Your cell phone is run by a provider and has maybe 0.0000001% as much lookups as routing would have.

        These things are all done in various tree light structures to try and eliminate central points of failure . The Internet was designed to try and resist failure, and you are creating some central failure points.

        Even if you created several of them, synchronisation issues would be Basically impossible to fix or take up unbelievable amounts of bandwidth

        • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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          This I’m interested in, because its at the edge/limits of my knowledge when it comes to domains and cellular networking.

          Are you saying if cell phones had a larger address space, let’s say 32 digits base 10, and every device was given a cell phone number, it would overwhelm the existing infrastructure?

  • ChaoticNeutralCzech@lemmy.one
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    Because

    1. When the internet was rolling out, a decentralized, open, best-effort solution of TCP/IP thankfully won over telephone companies’ centralized system proposal
    2. IPv6 is still not universal for some damn reason
    3. Onion addresses solve these problems but good luck getting everyone aboard with Tor
    4. You always trade anonymity for reachability, and with the amount of threats, NAT and firewalls have been put up to make it harder for unsolicited requests to reach you by default
  • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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    Phone numbers aren’t exactly unique. It’s really not much different than being assigned a static IP address from your ISP. They’re assigned and if a line is cancelled or you change your number, it goes to a dormant state for a while then is reassigned to someone else.

    Your phone’s IMEI on the other hand is a unique number, similar to a MAC address for network devices. Unlike a MAC though, it is illegal to spoof or clone an IMEI. Infrastructure however wasn’t designed to use the IMEI or MAC as the publicly accessible address, it was designed with a middle translation layer in mind.

    Not 100% sure, my early history is lacking a bit, but I think that was simply because the fundamental network design underlying everything we use predates unique identifiers like MAC addresses existing.

    • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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      Solid answer, thanks! You deserve all the upvotes that were, instead, for some reason, given to the guy that just said “I think its a MAC address”

  • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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    MAC’s used to be static, but then hackers found ways to spoof it. Now manufacturers don’t care to make them static anymore.

    Get a laptop with a SIM and you will have an IMEI and phone number, plus 5G.

  • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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    What makes you think all phones have unique numbers? Some have no direct dial numbers.

    As for each device getting a unique IP address this is somewhat in the spec for EUI-64 IPv6 address. Your IP is based on your interfaces MAC address but this becomes a privacy nightmare.

    If the MAC address’s of the wifi chip in your phone is 1122.3344.5566 your IPv6 address at home can be 2001:0db8:0000:00000:1122:33ff:fe44:5566 but when at work your address may be 2001:db8:1000:0000:1122:33ff:fe44:5566. No matter where you connect to the last 4 sections of the address is the same and companies will use that as one of the data points of your digital profile.

    • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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      I meant “in the same way that phone numbers are unique to phones (not perfectly unique, some phones have dual Sim, some have no sim, sometimes a Sim changes numbers after contacting the provider, etc)”

      Its just typing all that^ in a title is kinda long.

      EUI-64 IPv6 (and why its not a reality) though is kinda what I’m curious about. But not really because, even under that spec, its still not static like a phone number. I want to know why networks were not created in a way where I can send a message to a laptop regardless of what WiFi its connected to (assuming it is connected and online).

      • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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        Because it will be an ungodly thing to manage. The national phone databases are already a nightmare to manage. it would be far worse if we had a global one.

  • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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    • No, MAC addresses are not equivalent phone numbers. I can’t edit my phone number for free in 30sec to whatever I want, and I can’t send a message to a MAC address.

    You sure about that?

    • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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      Yes I’m sure. Try changing the number to 911. Phone numbers only have one owner, MAC addresses may have many owners.

        • jeffhykin@lemm.eeOP
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          The IP doesn’t persist across network hops (cell tower to cell tower) and the MAC address doesnt have one verified owner. A phone number is both verified having one owner and persists across network hops.

          • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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            Static ips persist.

            MAC addresses can be banned

            Phone numbers can’t roam

            Phone numbers aren’t unique (area code)

            Wrong on all fronts.

          • Sethayy@sh.itjust.works
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            So then drop your phone and pick up your friends.

            What number do you have now?

            Or if you really want an IP to follow you plug in your router at your friends house.

  • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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    You seem to have be missing a fundamental thing about tech but I can’t pin down what it is. So I will respond to your edits.

    but I can’t buy a static address that will persist across networks endpoint changes

    You can. It’s called Provider Independent Space and it a pain to go with as an individual.

    Yes, it would be a privacy nightmare, I want to know why it didnt turn out that way

    Because people smarter than you, I, and everyone else in this post said 'Yes EUI-64 is a good idea in principe but the problems on a privacy perspective outweigh the advantages. So let’s build a system called MAC randomisation so people can get multiple address to access the internet with. ’
    The good news is you can turn off MAC randomisation.

    AFAIK IP addresses (even static public ones) are not equivlent to phone numbers. I don’t get a new phone number every time I connect to a new cell tower

    In some parts of the world or before 2000 if you changed mobile providers, say from Vodafone to Telstra you had to get a new number. Since that change number routing has become a nightmare and it makes the BGPv4 table look sane in comparison.

    Even if a static IP is assigned to a device, my understanding is that connecting the device to a new uncontrolled WiFi, especially a router with a NAT, will make it so that people who try to connect to the static IP will simply fail.

    This is a complex one due to NAT in the ipv4 space. NAT exists purely to allow devices to have the same private IPv4 address and hide behind a public v4 address.

    No, MAC addresses are not equivalent phone numbers. 1. Phone numbers have one unique owner, MAC addresses can have many owners because they can be changed at any time to any thing on most laptops. 2. A message can’t be sent directly to a MAC address in the same way as a phone number

    1. MAC do have unique owner blocks. Cisco somewhat owned the 0000.0C block.
    2. Yes you can. That is literally how it works down the TCP/IP stack.

    Yes, IMEI is unique, but my laptop doesn’t have one and even if it did its not the same as an eSim or sim card. We can send a message to an activated Sim, we can’t send a message to an IMEI or serial number

    If your laptop has a regular Sim slot it will have an IMEI. True we can’t send messages via IMEI or serial because those systems were never designed for message routing.