Hello,
It appears that ASUS is tracking everyone (to some extent), and mapping/profiling the networks behind their consumer products. Every last machine on the network, by communicating with my router (RT-AC66U), is being instructed by the router (by default) to connect to "router.asus.com". Unfortunately, before "router.asus.com" is redirected the local address/network, communication is first established to a remote ASUS IP address "103.10.4.99" (click IP address for tcpiputils page on it), which then connects to an application running on Amazon Web Services at IP address "54.202.251.7" (http://ec2-54-202-251-7.us-west-2.compute.amazonaws.com/find/router.html), before finally redirecting.
This is also the address (router.asus.com) that you are instructed to connect to in order to access the router interface, if for some reason you decide you do not want to use the default 192.168.0.1 - meaning, this is some optional feature that ASUS is providing via an external remote service.
Also under the administrative settings within the router, no matter what you set the routers administrative IP for (eg: 192.168.0.1) over http/https, "router.asus.com" is still hardcoded. There is an indication when you switch the method to https, and it will show https://router.asus.com:8443 next to the port # for https. But its the same for http too (http://router.asus.com), even though it doesn't show this indicator. All the while you can still connect over the traditional, direct method via http://192.168.0.1 or https
This seems a bit invasive, and unnecessary. The router should be broadcasting its own addresses (eg: 192.168.0.1/24), not a domain owned by ASUS.
Merlin, can you please fix this invasive feature of the ASUS firmware in your modified firmware releases, and change all instances where this appears in the firmware to the respective relative local address (unless its something that can just be removed), for the benefit of the ASUS router product owners (not just the ones who value their privacy) who trust in your modified firmware releases. Anything related to router.asus.com should have no business in the firmware.
It appears that ASUS is tracking everyone (to some extent), and mapping/profiling the networks behind their consumer products. Every last machine on the network, by communicating with my router (RT-AC66U), is being instructed by the router (by default) to connect to "router.asus.com". Unfortunately, before "router.asus.com" is redirected the local address/network, communication is first established to a remote ASUS IP address "103.10.4.99" (click IP address for tcpiputils page on it), which then connects to an application running on Amazon Web Services at IP address "54.202.251.7" (http://ec2-54-202-251-7.us-west-2.compute.amazonaws.com/find/router.html), before finally redirecting.
This is also the address (router.asus.com) that you are instructed to connect to in order to access the router interface, if for some reason you decide you do not want to use the default 192.168.0.1 - meaning, this is some optional feature that ASUS is providing via an external remote service.
Also under the administrative settings within the router, no matter what you set the routers administrative IP for (eg: 192.168.0.1) over http/https, "router.asus.com" is still hardcoded. There is an indication when you switch the method to https, and it will show https://router.asus.com:8443 next to the port # for https. But its the same for http too (http://router.asus.com), even though it doesn't show this indicator. All the while you can still connect over the traditional, direct method via http://192.168.0.1 or https
This seems a bit invasive, and unnecessary. The router should be broadcasting its own addresses (eg: 192.168.0.1/24), not a domain owned by ASUS.
Merlin, can you please fix this invasive feature of the ASUS firmware in your modified firmware releases, and change all instances where this appears in the firmware to the respective relative local address (unless its something that can just be removed), for the benefit of the ASUS router product owners (not just the ones who value their privacy) who trust in your modified firmware releases. Anything related to router.asus.com should have no business in the firmware.
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