 pvsurfer join:2000-11-06 Palos Verdes Peninsula, CA 1 edit | reply to BlitzenZeus
Re: Can I hide my IP (w/o using a proxy)? said by BlitzenZeus:No, and why does it really matter? Unless your trying to do something malicious there is no reason to hide your ip address. To me it's simply a matter of privacy violation. Besides which, I strongly suspect it triggers a lot of the spam emails I receive.
Thanks -- "that's not a bug, that's a random feature!" |
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 BlitzenZeusBurnt Out CynicPremium join:2000-01-13 kudos:1 Reviews:
·Frontier FiOS
·Verizon FiOS
| It is your rDNS, which is set by your isp, and nothing is going to change that. Also your isp uses dhcp so your ip address changes will change own its own.
It is not an invasion of privacy, its a matter of a location of the node, and if it happens to fall in the same city where you live, that is the way it happens.
The only way the site your visiting could connect you to it would be to first have your e-mail address, and attach what ever information it can get, so it would need to have your e-mail address first. In reality the most spam comes from retailers, and resellers from online orders. -- My hourly rates: $25 per hour. $35 per hour if you want to watch. $45 per hour if you want to help. $75 per hour if you tried to fix it, and failed. $125 per hour if you called tech support, and didn't fix the issue while making things worse |
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 NetFixerFreedom is NOT freePremium join:2004-06-24 Murfreesboro, TN Reviews:
·Vonage
·Cingular Wireless
·Comcast
·AT&T Southeast
| reply to pvsurfer said by pvsurfer:To me it's simply a matter of privacy violation. Besides which, I strongly suspect it triggers a lot of the spam emails I receive. Without a public IP address, you can not connect to the internet. Your IP address does not in any way correlate to any email address you use. The only truly anonymous way to connect to the internet is to use a free wireless connection either from a legitimate source such as a public library, or simply by leeching from a neighbor (but don't forget to spoof your MAC address, since if you registered your wireless NIC for warranty purposes, the manufacturer knows your real MAC address). -- We can never have enough of nature. We need to witness our own limits transgressed, and some life pasturing freely where we never wander. Test your firewall. |
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 | reply to pvsurfer said by pvsurfer:I strongly suspect it triggers a lot of the spam emails I receive. For what it is worth, there is no way that someone is going to send you spam if all they know is your IP address. -- Your computer can help find a cure for cancer. Check out Team Discovery |
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 1 edit | reply to BlitzenZeus said by BlitzenZeus:In reality the most spam comes from retailers, and resellers from online orders. From what I have seen over the last six years or so is that most spam comes from email addresses that were posted on web pages or in usenet groups. I have a domain that I use only for giving out unique email addresses and have done some testing. Edit: Well, unless you were referring to pron retailers reselling your address, yeah, that is probably another source but I didn't include that in my research  -- Your computer can help find a cure for cancer. Check out Team Discovery |
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 BlitzenZeusBurnt Out CynicPremium join:2000-01-13 kudos:1 Reviews:
·Frontier FiOS
·Verizon FiOS
| The day after I placed an order on amazon.com I was getting mortgage spam with my name, and current address... The funny part was it was obvious I had an apartment number in the address which they didn't check for.
It was the company who amazon placed the order through that sold my information to spammers, and the address was spam free before that event.
Yes, robots looking for e-mail addresses on web pages/usenet/etc are a huge problem. -- My hourly rates: $25 per hour. $35 per hour if you want to watch. $45 per hour if you want to help. $75 per hour if you tried to fix it, and failed. $125 per hour if you called tech support, and didn't fix the issue while making things worse |
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 pvsurfer join:2000-11-06 Palos Verdes Peninsula, CA | I usually learn a lot from this site and this thread wasn't an exception...
So thanks to all of you, I am enlightened and a special thanks to Daniel who also gave me an idea for dinner! -- "that's not a bug, that's a random feature!" |
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 | reply to TomR_in_MI heres a quick explanation that might help... »www.auditmypc.com/whats-my-ip.asp behind a router, "usually" its at least hard to see your PRIVATE IP to find what that is, go to a command prompt, and type
ipconfig
if it doesnt show up on this page (java required) »www.auditmypc.com/ip-address.asp then you are pretty damnn safe IMHO. I run a political website, and ive had lots of people trying to hack me. Actually, mine (private IP) shows up, any suggestions on how to prevent this ? I am behind a modem and a router...
anyway, heres some more reading on internal IP... »www.auditmypc.com/internal-ip.html
also, speaking of spam,
a bit off topic, but heres a great tool to bust the bots. »www.auditmypc.com/freescan/antispam.html robots scan this page and get bunches of bad email addys, and links to more pages of bad email addys, and their database of addys is worthless. i have a link to this on my homepage so i can post my email addy there with no problems. |
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 NetFixerFreedom is NOT freePremium join:2004-06-24 Murfreesboro, TN Reviews:
·Vonage
·Cingular Wireless
·Comcast
·AT&T Southeast
| reply to BlitzenZeus
said by BlitzenZeus:It is your rDNS, which is set by your isp, and nothing is going to change that. Also your isp uses dhcp so your ip address changes will change own its own. For a typical residential ISP, that is true. It is not however always true as is shown by this rDNS lookup for my static IP address.
Trying "234.0.134.66.in-addr.arpa" Using domain server: Name: atlngahp-pub-ns1.covad.net Address: 64.105.202.138#53 Aliases:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 37290 ;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 2, ADDITIONAL: 2
;; QUESTION SECTION: ;234.0.134.66.in-addr.arpa. IN PTR
;; ANSWER SECTION: 234.0.134.66.in-addr.arpa. 3600 IN PTR dcs-net.net.
;; AUTHORITY SECTION: 0.134.66.in-addr.arpa. 3600 IN NS ns4.covad.com. 0.134.66.in-addr.arpa. 3600 IN NS ns3.covad.com.
;; ADDITIONAL SECTION: ns3.covad.com. 12719 IN A 66.134.75.38 ns4.covad.com. 20132 IN A 66.134.75.39
The generic rDNS return value would look something like "h-66-134-0-234.atlngahp.covad.net" had I not requested a custom PTR record for my static IP.
Of course the actual IP address 66.123.0.234 is still publicly visible as it must be for my connection to work, so the rDNS/PTR value still does not in any way hide an IP address, nor does having a static IP address.
-- We can never have enough of nature. We need to witness our own limits transgressed, and some life pasturing freely where we never wander. Test your firewall. |
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