Pesquisar no site de suporte

Evite golpes de suporte. Nunca pedimos que você ligue ou envie uma mensagem de texto para um número de telefone, ou compartilhe informações pessoais. Denuncie atividades suspeitas usando a opção “Denunciar abuso”.

Saiba mais

Esta discussão foi arquivada. Faça uma nova pergunta se precisa de ajuda.

I live in Grants Pass, Oregon(IP=69.71.164.88). Why does my browser think that I am in Port Towsend, Washington (IP=208.53.112.185)?

  • 3 respostas
  • 4 têm este problema
  • 3 visualizações
  • Última resposta de the-edmeister

more options

Details in question. I live in Grants Pass, Oregon(IP=69.71.164.88). Why does my browser think that I am in Port Towsend, Washington (IP=208.53.112.185)?

Details in question. I live in Grants Pass, Oregon(IP=69.71.164.88). Why does my browser think that I am in Port Towsend, Washington (IP=208.53.112.185)?

Solução escolhida

IMO, that email was sent by a person who isn't well versed in "how" their customers are actually connected to the internet

http://www.budget.net/signup Looks like that outfit is rather small and is probably buying services from larger internet providers, who then connect "budget.net" customers to the internet backbone, and "budget.net" is probably using IP addresses that are registered all over the northwest to other companies - not their own IP Addresses which could be "registered" to the communities where their customers are connecting to "budget.net". In many rural areas that is the only way people can get internet service any faster that the slowest dial-up speeds that the local telco can provide. The US federal government still hasn't embraced "universal service" for internet service like they did back in 1910 for US telephone service. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_service


No, that isn't a "problem", just an inconvenience when you're not blocking ads that "thinks" their website knows where you actually are located when viewing their webpages.


I've answered similar questions here from users in northern Washington whose IP Address "identified" them as being in British Columbia. But southern Oregon to the north corner of Washington is a lot larger difference than I would expect to see.

I live outside Chicago and when Comcast is doing maintenance in this region I have seen my connection point shift to the Alexandria, VA area where there are cross-country and international 'backbone' internet connections and where Comcast has a "central office" of sorts.

Ler esta resposta 👍 1

Todas as respostas (3)

more options

Firefox displays location information based upon what the Service Provider for the IP Address reports to the various services used by websites.

What does this service report? http://whatismyipaddress.com/

http://whatismyipaddress.com/ip-basics

more options

Tis is what my service provider sent me: The data for your IP address isn’t always translated right through the browser. Mine thinks I live in Corvallis sometimes.


Dennis

Budget Internet.


From: [email protected] mailto:[email protected] Sent: Monday, April 25, 2016 10:06 AM To: Help Desk <[email protected]> Cc: rgbonham <[email protected]> Subject: Port Townsend, WA,


Why do all of the web sites think that I live in Port Townsend, WA? Is there a problem?


RSVP

more options

Solução escolhida

IMO, that email was sent by a person who isn't well versed in "how" their customers are actually connected to the internet

http://www.budget.net/signup Looks like that outfit is rather small and is probably buying services from larger internet providers, who then connect "budget.net" customers to the internet backbone, and "budget.net" is probably using IP addresses that are registered all over the northwest to other companies - not their own IP Addresses which could be "registered" to the communities where their customers are connecting to "budget.net". In many rural areas that is the only way people can get internet service any faster that the slowest dial-up speeds that the local telco can provide. The US federal government still hasn't embraced "universal service" for internet service like they did back in 1910 for US telephone service. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_service


No, that isn't a "problem", just an inconvenience when you're not blocking ads that "thinks" their website knows where you actually are located when viewing their webpages.


I've answered similar questions here from users in northern Washington whose IP Address "identified" them as being in British Columbia. But southern Oregon to the north corner of Washington is a lot larger difference than I would expect to see.

I live outside Chicago and when Comcast is doing maintenance in this region I have seen my connection point shift to the Alexandria, VA area where there are cross-country and international 'backbone' internet connections and where Comcast has a "central office" of sorts.