Retrieves Any IP Address Information with Location, Email, IP, Domain, Owner, Country & many more.
IPNetInfo is a small utility that allows you to easily find all available information about an IP address: The owner of the IP address, the country/state name, IP addresses range, contact information (address, phone, fax, and email), and much of more.
This utility can be very useful for finding the origin of unsolicited mail. You can simply copy the message headers from your email software and paste them into IPNetInfo utility. IPNetInfo automatically extracts all IP addresses from the message headers, and displays the information about these IP addresses.
How does it work :
The IP address information is retrieved by sending a request to the whois server of ARIN. If ARIN doesn't maintain the information about the requested IP address, a second request is sent to the whois server of RIPE, APNIC, LACNIC or AfriNIC.
After the IP address information is retrieved, IPNetInfo analyzes the Whois record and displays it in a table. Notice: From time to time, the WHOIS server of ARIN is down and doesn't respond to WHOIS requests from IPNetInfo, and thus IPNetinfo fails to retrieve the IP address. When such a thing occurs, simply try again later.
IPNetInfo is standalone program, so it doesn't require any installation process or additional DLLs. You have to type one or more IP addresses separated by comma, space, or CRLF characters. If you want to find the origin of email message that you received, copy the entire message header to the clipboard, and then click the "Paste" button.
After the data is retrieved, the upper pane displays a nice summary of all IP addresses that you requested, including the owner name, country, network name, IP addresses range, contact information, and more. You can view this summary in your browser as HTML report, copy it to the clipboard, or save it as text/HTML/XML file.
When you click a particular item in the upper pane, the lower pane displays the original WHOIS record. You can copy the original WHOIS records to the clipboard, or save them to text file by using "Save Whois Records" option.
This utility can be very useful for finding the origin of unsolicited mail. You can simply copy the message headers from your email software and paste them into IPNetInfo utility. IPNetInfo automatically extracts all IP addresses from the message headers, and displays the information about these IP addresses.
How does it work :
The IP address information is retrieved by sending a request to the whois server of ARIN. If ARIN doesn't maintain the information about the requested IP address, a second request is sent to the whois server of RIPE, APNIC, LACNIC or AfriNIC.
After the IP address information is retrieved, IPNetInfo analyzes the Whois record and displays it in a table. Notice: From time to time, the WHOIS server of ARIN is down and doesn't respond to WHOIS requests from IPNetInfo, and thus IPNetinfo fails to retrieve the IP address. When such a thing occurs, simply try again later.
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Advantage Using IPNetInfo:IPNetInfo is standalone program, so it doesn't require any installation process or additional DLLs. You have to type one or more IP addresses separated by comma, space, or CRLF characters. If you want to find the origin of email message that you received, copy the entire message header to the clipboard, and then click the "Paste" button.
- Resolve IP addresses: If you select this option, all IP addresses are converted back to the host name. The resolved host name is displayed in 'Resolved Name' column.
- Convert host names to IP addresses: If you select this option, all host names that you type will be converted to IP addresses. You can use this option if you want to know who owns the IP address of specific Web site (For example: If you type 'www.yahoo.com', you'll get the information about the IP address of Yahoo Web site)
You should not select this option for message headers. - Load only the last IP address: In most email messages, the last IP address in the message headers is the address of the computer that sent the message. So if you select this option for message headers, you'll get the desired IP address in most cases (but not in all of them !). However, for finding the origin of unsolicited mail, it's not recommended to use this option, because many spammers add fake headers and IP addresses in order to deceive the user who tries to trace them. When you try to trace the origin of unsolicited mail, you should examine all IP addresses that appears in the message headers.
After the data is retrieved, the upper pane displays a nice summary of all IP addresses that you requested, including the owner name, country, network name, IP addresses range, contact information, and more. You can view this summary in your browser as HTML report, copy it to the clipboard, or save it as text/HTML/XML file.
When you click a particular item in the upper pane, the lower pane displays the original WHOIS record. You can copy the original WHOIS records to the clipboard, or save them to text file by using "Save Whois Records" option.
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