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all 18 comments

[–]Frynge 26 points27 points  (1 child)

that is a valid IP. it resolves to... Timişoara, Timiș, Romania. no hostname. requires a login and password. you might have found something interesting.

[–]Aggravating-Voice-86[S] 25 points26 points  (0 children)

Wow. That's the city I was in when I heard the message. That's trippy.

[–]Sparkycivic 12 points13 points  (2 children)

That's the Audio link equipment telling it's up address because it's become disconnected from it's server. I have a radio station near me that sometimes does this when the remote studio link goes down. It must be pretty embarrassing for the engineer ... Having it exposed to the public it very risky

[–]Aggravating-Voice-86[S] 1 point2 points  (1 child)

So it could be someone that has radio equipment (ham radio or some RoIP device?) that is playing around with it?

[–]Northwest_Radio 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It would not be Ham radio related. I believe the statement/comment here about audio equipment and remote studio is a good suggestion.

[–]libcrypto 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I wonder if the speaker later on gave credentials.

[–]GiraffeNatural101 6 points7 points  (2 children)

kinda weird... Port scan on 95.76.223.43

PORT STATE SERVICE VERSION

25/tcp filtered smtp

80/tcp open http Stanley NT500 access control system httpd

113/tcp filtered ident

135/tcp filtered msrpc

139/tcp filtered netbios-ssn

445/tcp filtered microsoft-ds

Device type: WAP|specialized|game console|general purpose|printer|power-device

Running (JUST GUESSING): Enistic embedded (91%), Crestron 2-Series (90%), Nintendo embedded (90%)

[–]gmroybal 2 points3 points  (1 child)

Stanley NT500

That's an access control server for some door or something. This might be a hell of an ARG lol.

[–]Aggravating-Voice-86[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I had to google what ARG is haha. After reading what the acronym stands for I now understand. Yea, if it's some sort of ARG this would be really interesting to solve and find out.

[–]rb109544 4 points5 points  (0 children)

There would certainly be an offset to the real one.

[–]libcrypto 2 points3 points  (2 children)

They are now aware of the probing (most likely), and have shut down HTTPS service on this IP.

[–]Aggravating-Voice-86[S] 1 point2 points  (1 child)

Interesting. At the moment it is still early hours. 8 AM-9AM maybe it doesn't function at this hour?

[–]libcrypto 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I doubt it. Services tend not to have scheduled daily downtime.

[–]Snarky_McSnarkleton 2 points3 points  (1 child)

Strange that it would be on a broadcast frequency. It may have been an engineer, testing the transmitter?

Or is 89.7 a broadcast frequency in Europe?

[–]Aggravating-Voice-86[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

89.7MHz is the frequency that I tune my car's radio to when I'm listening to my preferred radio station.

I was also wondering that maybe some sound guy was playing around with devices but strange how it overpowered the station and how the music faded out and back in during the messages.

[–][deleted] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm glad I'm not the only one that experienced this! Recently every so often while I'm riding in the car the radio music fades out to some guy saying bunch if random numbers similar to this. 334 dot. Something something. can't remember the rest tho. happen like 3 times within a month.

[–]Accomplished-Toe-197 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just heard this in Las Vegas 103.1 FM, same format, numbers separated by “dot”. Only once and I was driving so I didn’t get to copy the numbers down or record. Glad there’s an explanation here, was super weird. 

[–]Imnotquitesurel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same thing happened to me today , it came on multiple times and it said 192.168.25.198 with the same voice you heard , it was somewhere in Ohio so idk but did anyone figure out why this happened