Pirating isn't stealing anyway. Copying data doesn't take the original data away from the place you copied it from. Stealing does remove the original object from its original location.
JackGreenEarth
My Motorola uses a MediaTek chip, and that's the first time I've been glad about that
How do I find that? Is it written on the router somewhere, or is there a command to run to find it?
It's not doing what it was before now, now it's just showing the 'activation of network connection failed' error. But before when I ran the up command it had the connected sign, and said it was connected in the GUI, but when I tried accessing any website it wasn't able to, and I don't have any firewall installed, so I assumed that the connection wasn't working.
The result for ip address show ens6f1 is now the same as before
12: ens6f1: <BROADCAST, MULTICAST, UP, LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc mq state UP group default qlen 1000
link/ether 14:02:ec:7d:52:f1 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
altname enp129s0f1
inet6 fe80::1602::ecff::fe7d::52f1/64 scope link noprefixroute
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
62.49.7.152 is my public IP, if that's what you mean. How do I use that information, other than allowing others to know my approximate location?
The first time I tried it it had the connected icon but no actual network connection, the second time it didn't do anything
The first command didn't work as networkd wasn't started, so I tried to start it with networkctl start networkd, but it said 'failed to start networkd.service: Unit networkd.service not found'
I checked with my laptop, and the same cable provided internet there, which makes me think it's something to do with the software on the server.
I set the manual ipv4 to 192.168.0.72, and it says it's connected - it doesn't have any 'activation of network connection failed' error messages, but it doesn't seem to actually have any internet either
I didn't set it up; another member of my household did