How to get IP Address of Some one ?
"When you create an instant messaging conversation, you're not connecting to the person you're talking with at all."
In fact, let's look at the IP's in use when I have a conversation with an MSN Messenger user. Using TcpView during the conversation I see the following connections associated with my IM client, Trillian: If I then use the whois lookup at arin.net to see who owns the IP addresses involved, I find:
216.155.193.143 - is owned by Yahoo (Trillian is configured to include my Yahoo account)
72.14.253.125 - is owned by Google (Trillian is configured to include my Google Talk account)
207.46.108.59 - is owned by Microsoft (Trillian is configured to include my MSN Instant Messenger account)
207.46.108.19 - is also owned by Microsoft
205.188.7.148 - is owned by AOL (Trillian is configured to include my AOL Instant Messenger account)
64.12.165.100 - is also owned by AOL
Nowhere in there is the IP address of the party to whom I'm speaking. (To confirm, that "other party" is my wife's place of business, so I know what the IP address would be should it have been visible.) • The Exception Now it's easy to say that "most" IM clients connect you through their servers, but it's also true that some do not. In fact, some instant messaging services allow you to establish a "direct connection". I believe that AIM allows you to switch to this type of connection, and some other services such as Skype actually often operate this way natively in some configurations after the connection has been made. So let's assume, then, that using TcpView during an IM conversation you're able to capture the IP addresses used by your IM program, and one of these represents a direct connection to the person you're messaging. What can you tell from this IP address? Pretty much nothing. Still.
They could be behind a router or proxy provided by their ISP. This means that any number of people could "appear" to use that same IP. There's no way to tell which user that is(*).
Similarly, they could be behind a router or proxy provided by their school or place of work. Once again any number of people could "appear" to use that same IP, and there's still no way to tell which user that is(*).
They could be behind their own router at home as I so often recommend. Any number of machines could be behind that router, and there's no way for you to tell which machine you're conversing with.
And finally, even with the IP address of a specific machine or location, there's no way for you to tell where that machine is located(*). The best you can do is identify the ISP that's providing the internet connection to the person you're conversing with.
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