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Forum Discussion
neilBar
2 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...
- 2 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.
Mark
2 years agoSuper User II
Hi neilBar
If its asked to reconnect after you disconnected it, no, you are not in trouble its the same device connected again,
Note that there is no way anybody could use your Time Machine discs to connect to Dropbox - they would need the actual username and password.
- neilBar2 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Hi Mark
thanks for helping
to clarify -
the device that was listed as connected was "ChristopersMBP4.localdomain"
I dumped it,
Now the mini is logged in connected as: "neils-mini.local"
not as ".localdomain"
Doyou still think it’s the same device? why the different name and .local -v- .localdomain?
I'd love to know how "localdomain" differs from "local"
Would "ChristopersMBP4.localdomain" have to be on my network? Other macs here show as just - .local
I think they could theoretically log into dropbox because of saved browser passwords - its scaring me that someones in my data
thanks lots for the help
- Mark2 years agoSuper User II
The simple answer is 'thats what your Mac was called at that time'. Updating the OS can change that. There is nothing sinister about it.
If they have access to saved browser info then changing will help but you also need to update things like emails etc. Consider 2FA as well.
- neilBar2 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Hi Mark
thanks
"The simple answer is 'thats what your Mac was called at that time'"
but I never had a mac called: ChristopersMBP4 its lookin glike it was someone else in my Dropbox
and I'd still like to know why it was labelled "localdomain" wheras my others are "local"
yeah I'm doing 2FA where its available
good of you to help
neil
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