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Forum Discussion
neilBar
3 years agoHelpful | Level 5
compromised? stolen mac timemachine disk - what does "localdomain" mean in 'connected devices' list?
Hi I'm bit worried, my mac time machine discs were stolen last week (unencrypted) so I changed my dropbox password (and many others) 10 am this morning, I was prompted to check the devices connecte...
- 3 years ago
Hi neilBar, the names don't really mean much, since this is the name pulled from the device itself when first making the connection to the Dropbox server.
If you hover over the i icon, you can see the IP address of the device itself. If it matches one of your own, then it could be another device you have on your premises, or immediately location.
If you don't recognize the device, you can simply remove it from your account. If you're on a paid plan, you can also remotely wipe the Dropbox folder on that device at the same time.
neilBar
3 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Hi Mark
thanks for trying but my mac was never called ChristopersMBP4, there's no Christopher in my family
neilBar
3 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Hi, I have suffered a data breach, some backup disks were stolen.
I spotted a Mac I don't recognize connected to my Dropbox account in: Dropbox settings/security/devices.
I believe that the thieves COULD have cloned my Mac using my Time Machine backups to restore a machine, that way they'd have my browser saved passwords. So before I changed the passwords they COULD have accessed my dropbox acct online.
My own connected Macs are listed there as "XXX.local", but this one was listed as "ChristopersMBP4.localdomain".
There's no Christopher here, No Mac here was never named that way.
I am finding it hard to understand what " localdomain" -v - "local" means in this context - if anyone knows I'd be very grateful.
Here's a screenshot when it was connected, I binned it immediately.
All my own macs are connected now - as XXX.local
thanks
- Mark3 years ago
Super User II
Hi neilBar
As I said on the other thread there is no difference at all other than what the device itself is called. The names are just pulled direct from what Apple has named the machine. There is nothing more than this. There is no complicated naming convention other than pulling what the device, in System Admin, is called.
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