if u mean private like as in a person u can send them an email and track it that way.
if u mean private like a website u can open up cmd and type> ping (website)
A free IP address is given to you whenever you connect to the internet. It is simply the address that data is sent to you when you load any webpage that you want.
Yes. That's the whole idea of private IP addresses. With NAT, the outside world never "sees" your private IP addresses.Yes. That's the whole idea of private IP addresses. With NAT, the outside world never "sees" your private IP addresses.Yes. That's the whole idea of private IP addresses. With NAT, the outside world never "sees" your private IP addresses.Yes. That's the whole idea of private IP addresses. With NAT, the outside world never "sees" your private IP addresses.
They are private addresses. I think Class A
There are two types of IP addresses: public and private IP adresses. Private IP's are categorized into 5 classes ranging from A to E. Ever since the growth of tcp/ip networks, engineers have associated a name such as: Google with a public IP address. We accomplish this through DNS which primarily translates these names to IP addresses and vice versa. If you would like to look up the name of a public IP addresses or find it's registrar use the program WHOIS. For private IP addresses you would first have to be connected to the network then you would view your local DNS records.
Private IP addresses
public ip-addresses are used in the Internet (they are registered addresses). private ip-addresses are used in local networks. imagine you have a computer in your local network that has a public ip-address and your PC has simultaneously an Internet connection: if you try to ping this pc you wouldn't be able to tell which computer is replying, the local one or the webserver.
Private IP Addresses are not used for internet data traffic but are intended to be used specifically on internal networks called intranets.
the IP address is assigned to your computer by your DHCP server you can only have 1 true ip address, although you can have ghost ip address and private ip addresses Private Addresses are not routable through the internet Ghosts IP addresses are normally used to cover something up, usually something illegal ;)
Translates private IP addresses
They are normally the IP addresses which your computer uses to talk to your internet router/modem. They are not the same as the IP address that your router is known by on the broadband link.
172.16.0.0 is itself a private IP address. (IP addresses from 172.16.0.0 to 172. 31.255.255 are all private IP addresses. Other private IP addresses are 10.X.X.X and 192.168.X.X where X can be from 0 to 255). But it's not usable as an IP address for a device such as a PC or host. This is because it's the first address and, by convention, the first address of a network is used to indicate its network address.
The usual reason to use private IP addresses is when you have to share a single public IP address (or a few public IP addresses) among a larger number of computers. Nowadays, this situation is quite common - it is no longer possible to assign a public IP (version 4) address to each and every computer; IP addresses are starting to get scarce. In the scenario mentioned above, private IP addresses according to RFC 1918 are used in combination with NAT (network address translation).
"The RFC 1918 private network numbers are 10.0.0.0, Class Bs between 172.16.0.0 and 172.31.0.0 inclusive, and all Class C networks that begin with 192.168. All addresses that begin with 127 are reserved, but not as valid private IP addresses."