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An Internet Protocol (IP) address is a numerical label that is assigned to devices participating in a computer network, that uses the Internet Protocol for communication between its nodes. An IP address serves two principal functions: host or network interface identification and location addressing. Its role has been characterized as follows: "A name indicates what we seek. An address indicates where it is. A route indicates how to get there." The designers of TCP/IP defined an IP address as a 32-bit number and this system, known as Internet Protocol Version 4 or IPv4, is still in use today. However, due to the enormous growth of the Internet and the resulting depletion of available addresses, a new addressing system (IPv6), using 128 bits for the address, was developed in 1995 and last standardized by RFC 2460 in 1998. Although IP addresses are stored as binary numbers, they are usually displayed in human-readable notations, such as 208.77.188.166 (for IPv4), and 2001:db8:0:1234:0:567:1:1 (for IPv6). The Internet Protocol also routes data packets between networks; IP addresses specify the locations of the source and destination nodes in the topology of the routing system. For this purpose, some of the bits in an IP address are used to designate a subnetwork. The number of these bits is indicated in CIDR notation, appended to the IP address; e.g., 208.77.188.166/24. As the development of private networks raised the threat of IPv4 address exhaustion, RFC 1918 set aside a group of private address spaces that may be used by anyone on private networks. They are often used with network address translators to connect to the global public Internet. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), which manages the IP address space allocations globally, cooperates with five Regional Internet Registries (RIRs) to allocate IP address blocks to Local Internet Registries (Internet service providers) and other entities. From Wikipedia under the
GNU Free Documentation License How do all computer have unique ip addresses? Q. I have a question about ip addresses. How do all the computers in the world have their own ip addresses? Aren't there more computers in the world than there are digits in an ip address? For example, my ip address is xxx.xxx.x.xxx. That's 10 digits, or the possibility of 9,999,999,999 computers. Surely, there are more than that many computer connected to the internet. So, could someone please explain how this works? thanks Asked by Alex - Thu Aug 6 22:21:03 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments A. actually those number only go up to 255 due to the Hex code. So that makes it 4,294,967,296, with about 3.3 to 3.4 Billion that are publically available (between a router to your ISP), with the rest for local networks. (like between your computers and routers) Also we are running out of ip address, which is why are are switch from ipV4 to ipv6. Which will allow 3.403 10^38 addresses. On how these works, I suggest you read this: Answered by Aaron - Thu Aug 6 22:30:28 2009 Why I can't find real originated IP addresses in full headers anymore, especially in messages sent from Hotmai? Q. I noticed recently that I don't see real originated IP addresses in full message headers when I am viewing messages in Yahoo mail anymore. Especially, if I am trying to locate this IP address in the messages sent from Hotmail. It does not happen, if I am reading messages in other email services but Yahoo. What happened? Asked by moorgarry - Tue Feb 24 11:30:58 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments A. They should be somewhere line Received: from If you have trouble you can always this free email tracer: Answered by Miha L - Fri Feb 27 03:41:39 2009 for bulk email sender ,I want to know why Yahoo is blocking more of the IP addresses recently?
Q. As a bulk email sender, we follow the best practices for Deliverability. In the recent past we have observed that Yahoo is blocking most of our IP addresses from sending with erorr code of 553. Can someone let me know, whats going with Yahoo. Asked by Joe - Thu May 28 10:37:21 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments A. You appear to be saying you have been blocked for sending or being associated with spam. I suggest 1. You send a message to everbody in your address list requesting that they sign up to a new address list. 2. You drop the old address list in favour of the new one. 3, You use a server not associated with spam. Answered by david spamhater - Thu May 28 17:34:17 2009 From Yahoo Answer Search: "ip addresses" Google mobile apps collect Wi-Fi location data - CNET
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