Quote:
Originally Posted by Zoinkas
You can check an IP address against the ranges for public vs private IP addresses to see if a particular IP address is public or private. All private IP addresses begin with 10, 172, or 192, though some public IP addresses may also begin with 172 and 192.
On a typical network, the router uses a public IP address to identify you to the rest of the internet, ensuring that emails, websites, streaming content, and other data reaches you correctly.
Within that network, there are likely a variety of different devices. The router assigns each device a unique private IP address so it can send data to the device that’s actually requesting it. Devices on the same network use private IP addresses to communicate directly.
Not all my information
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Why on earth are you talking about local ip addresses? :D. What you're describing is
LOCAL IP addresses :rtfm: 10.0.0.0 -> 10.255.255.255 and 172.16.0.0 -> 172.31.255.255 and 192.168.0.0 -> 192.168.255.255 is what we'd call RFC1918 ip addresses and are reserved to LOCAL WAN networks and NOT available to the internet.
Anyways back to the case, so what you're saying is that cerb has mapped out every ISP and every public network in existence to not target them? Haha, this is getting dumb, you clearly lack networking understanding. I also mentioned residential VPN, maybe you should look up how that actually works. You cannot simply determine that a user is using residential VPN or residential socks4/5 the way that you describe.
The fun part about you is that you're actually googling your way to discussing with me :D Why are you discussing a subject with me that you have to google your way through? :bandit:
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Anyways, this was all i needed to prove.
I'm done here and this confirmed everything :cool: