On Thu, 3 Oct 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
cruniching the data that says Of 10 sites that I saw this IP address access
and provide a clearing for the credit card transaction, 9 ended up being
within 3 miles radius of . Lets put a tag on that
I would be REALLY interested to know
Thus spake [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Say I have about 10 /16's reachable through firewalls in SJC, RDU, SYD, and
AMS.
No traceroutes or pings can make it past these firewalls, nor do the
hostnames
indicate any particular location. How exactly do you plan on mapping these
to a
zip code, when I
databases. If those users never buy stuff from Amazon.com, Amazon.com does
not care where they are. But eh moment they do, somewhere someone is
cruniching the data that says Of 10 sites that I saw this IP address access
and provide a clearing for the credit card transaction, 9 ended up
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for an
IP than the methods I've described above?
Physical geography and DNS do not match. Some of the most popular web sites
in Indian under the .in domain are physically in the US and owned by US
companies. Having a web
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for an
IP than the methods I've described above?
Yes, at least three companies have databases of pretty much all /24s and
above mapped up to a zip code.
Alex
On Thu, 3 Oct 2002, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for an
IP than the methods I've described above?
Yes, at least three companies have databases of pretty much all /24s and
above mapped up to a zip code.
So far I've been
On Thu, 3 Oct 2002, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for an
IP than the methods I've described above?
Yes, at least three companies have databases of pretty much all /24s and
above mapped up to a zip code.
So far
On Thu, Oct 03, 2002 at 11:10:45AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 3 Oct 2002, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for an
IP than the methods I've described above?
Yes, at least three companies have databases
Thus spake Ralph Doncaster [EMAIL PROTECTED]
That's basically all Netscape Microsoft were doing when they had to
restrict 128-bit SSL. They threw in the requirement to enter your address
phone number, but they had no way of telling if you were entering your
address, or the one you got
On Thu, 3 Oct 2002, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
Thus spake Ralph Doncaster [EMAIL PROTECTED]
That's basically all Netscape Microsoft were doing when they had to
restrict 128-bit SSL. They threw in the requirement to enter your address
phone number, but they had no way of telling if you were
I believe Akamai offers an IP address to location database for sale. I'm
unsure of the accuracy, but Akamai folks claim it to be quite high. YMMV.
- Daniel Golding
On Thu, 3 Oct 2002, Barry Raveendran Greene wrote:
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for
Ralph,
You and alex exchanged:
On Thu, 3 Oct 2002, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for an
IP than the methods I've described above?
Yes, at least three companies have databases of pretty much all /24s and
above mapped up
One of my clients is a large computer security software
company. According to them, it's not just crypto export rules that are
the concern, but also the ITAR countries (N. Korea, Lybia, Cuba, ...). As
well they are concerned about liabilities in countries like France where
it is illegal to
Yo Alex!
On Thu, 3 Oct 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for an
IP than the methods I've described above?
Yes, at least three companies have databases of pretty much all /24s and
above mapped up to a zip code.
These DBs
On Thu, 3 Oct 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for an
IP than the methods I've described above?
Yes, at least three companies have databases of pretty much all /24s and
above mapped up to a zip code.
These DBs
Wrong answer.
Just because free public dbs dont have that info does not mean that it does
not exist.
Say I have about 10 /16's reachable through firewalls in SJC, RDU, SYD, and AMS.
No traceroutes or pings can make it past these firewalls, nor do the hostnames
indicate any
On Thu, Oct 03, 2002 at 04:22:30PM -0500, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
Say I have about 10 /16's reachable through firewalls in SJC, RDU, SYD, and AMS.
No traceroutes or pings can make it past these firewalls, nor do the hostnames
indicate any particular location. How exactly do you plan on
On Wed, Oct 02, 2002 at 11:21:04PM -0400, Ralph Doncaster wrote:
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for an
IP than the methods I've described above?
http://www.nicolas-guillard.com/cybergeography-fr/mapping.html
-dre
Andre,
I fail to see where a pointer to the French version of Dodge's
UCL-based cybergeography pages responds to Ralph's queries.
Peter
On Thu, 3 Oct 2002, Gary E. Miller wrote:
I would be REALLY interested to know how you measure mileage with IP.
Latency triangulation.
Bradley
Yo Bradley!
On Thu, 3 Oct 2002, Bradley Dunn wrote:
I would be REALLY interested to know how you measure mileage with IP.
Latency triangulation.
Oh really? So you can figure out how plugged the pipe is,
how backed up the router is, and then measure the speed of light?
Triangulate this:
I would like to restrict access from certain countries to content on my
network (for security and legal reasons).
So far the best algorithm I've been able to come up with is a combination
of reverse DNS and APNIC/ARIN/RIPE whois queries. I've written a perl
cgi that checks reverse DNS first,
On Wed, Oct 02, 2002 at 11:21:04PM -0400, Ralph Doncaster wrote:
Is there a more accurate method to determine the country of origin for an
IP than the methods I've described above?
Several companies offer such services. I'd be happy to give some
pointers offlist.
On Wednesday, Oct 2, 2002, at 23:21 Canada/Eastern, Ralph Doncaster
wrote:
I would like to restrict access from certain countries to content on my
network (for security and legal reasons).
So far the best algorithm I've been able to come up with is a
combination
of reverse DNS and
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