IP noob
- Grand_Master
- Posts: 81
- Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2008 3:07 pm
- Location: Sweden
Pleas.. Use logic at first.
I hate this kind of questions. Not just that they are "noobish". It's that an answere wouldn't help, either.
Study the basics, first. Obviously you don't know the basics and wouldn't even have any use of getting an IP-adress, even if you could aquire it.
I hate this kind of questions. Not just that they are "noobish". It's that an answere wouldn't help, either.
Study the basics, first. Obviously you don't know the basics and wouldn't even have any use of getting an IP-adress, even if you could aquire it.
"Learn, grow, teach."
- Grand_Master
- Posts: 81
- Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2008 3:07 pm
- Location: Sweden
- PaRaDoX1
- Posts: 35
- Joined: Fri Nov 14, 2008 2:01 am
- Location: behind you, staring at the back of your head.
lol,S3th wrote:Thanks, it's just with all those trolls, you can tell them to piss off by saying like: "Let me gain your IP and do shit" and they say go ahead, If I can get their IP it would scare them >:3
Nah, but I just wanna learn more about it all.
I'm pretty sure that's what the trolls themselves do :3
bekarazu tazuneru.
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- Posts: 273
- Joined: Thu Apr 10, 2008 9:47 pm
The only way I know of to get someone's IP address from a website is to send them a private message and attach an image (preferably 1x1) from a web server that you control. Then look at the logs and see which IP requested that image.
The only thing I can think of to do something with that IP is report them to the authorities if you have proof that they are threatening you or otherwise. I don't do that sort of hacking since it is a waste of time I think...
The only thing I can think of to do something with that IP is report them to the authorities if you have proof that they are threatening you or otherwise. I don't do that sort of hacking since it is a waste of time I think...
Finding IP address in Yahoo! Mail
1. Log into your Yahoo! mail with your username and password.
2. Click on Inbox or whichever folder you have stored your mail.
3. Open the mail.
4. If you do not see the headers above the mail message, your headers are not displayed.
To display the headers,
Click on Options on the top-right corner
In the Mail Options page, click on General Preferences
Scroll down to Messages where you have the Headers option
Make sure that Show all headers on incoming messages is selected
Click on the Save button
Go back to the mails and open that mail
5. You should see similar headers like this:
6. You may copy the headers and use my IP address detection script to ease the process.
Or if you want to manually find the IP address, proceed to 7.
7. Look for Received: from followed by the IP address between square brackets [ ].
Here, it is 202.65.138.109.
That is be the IP address of the sender.
If there are many instances of Received: from with the IP address, select the
IP address in the last pattern. If there are no instances of Received: from with the
IP address, select the first IP address in X-Originating-IP.
8. Track the IP address of the sender
1. Log into your Yahoo! mail with your username and password.
2. Click on Inbox or whichever folder you have stored your mail.
3. Open the mail.
4. If you do not see the headers above the mail message, your headers are not displayed.
To display the headers,
Click on Options on the top-right corner
In the Mail Options page, click on General Preferences
Scroll down to Messages where you have the Headers option
Make sure that Show all headers on incoming messages is selected
Click on the Save button
Go back to the mails and open that mail
5. You should see similar headers like this:
6. You may copy the headers and use my IP address detection script to ease the process.
Or if you want to manually find the IP address, proceed to 7.
7. Look for Received: from followed by the IP address between square brackets [ ].
Here, it is 202.65.138.109.
That is be the IP address of the sender.
If there are many instances of Received: from with the IP address, select the
IP address in the last pattern. If there are no instances of Received: from with the
IP address, select the first IP address in X-Originating-IP.
8. Track the IP address of the sender
Mess With The Best, Die Like The Rest!
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- Posts: 205
- Joined: Sat Nov 29, 2008 3:19 am
Although that it isn't as reliable when a sender used a proxy.a-sharp wrote:Finding IP address in Yahoo! Mail
1. Log into your Yahoo! mail with your username and password.
2. Click on Inbox or whichever folder you have stored your mail.
3. Open the mail.
4. If you do not see the headers above the mail message, your headers are not displayed.
To display the headers,
Click on Options on the top-right corner
In the Mail Options page, click on General Preferences
Scroll down to Messages where you have the Headers option
Make sure that Show all headers on incoming messages is selected
Click on the Save button
Go back to the mails and open that mail
5. You should see similar headers like this:
6. You may copy the headers and use my IP address detection script to ease the process.
Or if you want to manually find the IP address, proceed to 7.
7. Look for Received: from followed by the IP address between square brackets [ ].
Here, it is 202.65.138.109.
That is be the IP address of the sender.
If there are many instances of Received: from with the IP address, select the
IP address in the last pattern. If there are no instances of Received: from with the
IP address, select the first IP address in X-Originating-IP.
8. Track the IP address of the sender
The Assistant of the Clan. The White Orders.
- PaRaDoX
- Posts: 708
- Joined: Fri Aug 22, 2008 5:52 am
- Location: In your fridge, waiting to pop out and scare you.
Lol, "isn't as reliable?" It's hardly reliable at all, since most of the time an ISP won't show the originating IP. They just rape it.BerryTheWest wrote:Although that it isn't as reliable when a sender used a proxy.a-sharp wrote:Finding IP address in Yahoo! Mail
1. Log into your Yahoo! mail with your username and password.
2. Click on Inbox or whichever folder you have stored your mail.
3. Open the mail.
4. If you do not see the headers above the mail message, your headers are not displayed.
To display the headers,
Click on Options on the top-right corner
In the Mail Options page, click on General Preferences
Scroll down to Messages where you have the Headers option
Make sure that Show all headers on incoming messages is selected
Click on the Save button
Go back to the mails and open that mail
5. You should see similar headers like this:
6. You may copy the headers and use my IP address detection script to ease the process.
Or if you want to manually find the IP address, proceed to 7.
7. Look for Received: from followed by the IP address between square brackets [ ].
Here, it is 202.65.138.109.
That is be the IP address of the sender.
If there are many instances of Received: from with the IP address, select the
IP address in the last pattern. If there are no instances of Received: from with the
IP address, select the first IP address in X-Originating-IP.
8. Track the IP address of the sender
~You are a glitch in my reasoning.