>board operator asked: >> >> I was wondering if there's any way to trace the geography (actual city or >> state, province etc.) of a person's static IP address. I know that most >> have dynamic (changing) IP's but if I were to somehow obtain their static >> IP, could I then begin an amateur trace to their physical location? There's no way to tie a location to a numerical IP address. There's a weak way to tie location information to the domain name that corresponds to the numerical IP address. But if you want accurate location information (i.e. targeting the corresponding host with a missile) forget it. The domain name provides some information, but its accuracy is at the discretion of the organization that registered the domain. Static and dynamic IP addresses from a given domain will probably be reported to have the same geographic address even if some IP addresses actually belong to remote sites. Alex Noordergraaf wrote: > >Try: > > http://cello.cs.uiuc.edu/cgi-bin/slamm/ip2ll As the Web site says, it relies on 'whois' data from the internic database. The database's contents are at the discretion of the domain's owner, and this limits the real accuracy of geographical data. For example, it translates "securecomputing.com" and "sjc.securecomputing.com" and "tor.securecomputing.com" all to Roseville, MN. In fact, the first domain may actually be routed to Roseville, but the second is in San Jose, CA, and the third in Toronto, Canada. Rick. smithat_private "Internet Cryptography" at http://www.visi.com/crypto/
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Fri Apr 13 2001 - 13:43:02 PDT