Can You Really Be Traced From an IP Address? 246
Barence writes "Identifying individuals using nothing more than their IP address has become a key part of anti-piracy and criminal investigations. But a PC Pro investigation casts serious doubt on the validity of IP-based evidence. 'In general, the accuracy of IP address tracing varies depending on the type of user behind the IP address,' Tom Colvin, chief technology officer with security vendor Conseal told PC Pro. 'Whilst big businesses can be traceable right back to their datacenters, standard family broadband connections are often hard to locate, even to county-level accuracy.'"
Sure. Don't be paranoid! (Score:5, Insightful)
Depending on what data is being captured by the ISP for management purposes, this COULD be true.
But, if they can track you well enough to meter you (Comcast, AT&T, etc), they can track you down to your IP too.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
reverse dns + office workers = trouble (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:WTF? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Static & resolves? (Score:3, Insightful)
I would say if your address is static OR you ISP is happy to cooperate; only takes one for you to be quite trackable. What worries me a bit is that this article seems to advocate for legal precedent to be based on this idea, which is quite short sighted. Yea, right now it might be a bit hard to authoritatively determine the end user of a dynamic IP, but IPv6 is coming and when it does, everything and everyone will have their own, easily traceable IP address. Privacy laws need to be based around that assumption now.