Google.com/ipv6 detects wrong ipaddress


Recommended Posts

After reading the article about Google is launching IPv6 today, I check the website Google.com/ipv6, but it gives me weird error

it says, my computer is creating unusual traffic, & the weird thing is it detect wrong IP Address, i have 4 Proxy servers, I checked one by one, and it keep giving me same error with same IP address for all 4 Proxy Addresses.

ioNcTZJD2q2vy.JPG

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You using 4 different proxies -- :rolleyes:

Yeah bouncing off a proxy you are sharing the traffic to google that everyone else using that proxy has sent. Like sleeping with a 2 dollar ###### in the middle of the worse hell hole on the planet without a rubber and wondering why you got a std.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You using 4 different proxies -- :rolleyes:

Yeah bouncing off a proxy you are sharing the traffic to google that everyone else using that proxy has sent. Like sleeping with a 2 dollar ###### in the middle of the worse hell hole on the planet without a rubber and wondering why you got a std.

4 Different proxy Servers, with 4 Different ISP's !

hope its clear your doubts !

& I am using Ipv4 at the moment not shifted to IPv6, maybe thats problem ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i don't care if its 1000 ISPs -- proxy is still a proxy, you are talking to google.com with the same IP as every other use of that proxy.. Just like a $2 ###### -- and why get the drips after ;)

Why don't you just access the site directly vs bouncing off a proxy.

Accessing that site has nothing to do with ipv6, its a site about ipv6 -- now if you want to access ipv6.google.com then you would need to be using ipv6

C:\Windows\system32>ping ipv6.google.com

Pinging ipv6.l.google.com [2607:f8b0:400f:801::1014] with 32 bytes of data:

Reply from 2607:f8b0:400f:801::1014: time=57ms

Reply from 2607:f8b0:400f:801::1014: time=59ms

Reply from 2607:f8b0:400f:801::1014: time=55ms

Reply from 2607:f8b0:400f:801::1014: time=61ms

Ping statistics for 2607:f8b0:400f:801::1014:

Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),

Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:

Minimum = 55ms, Maximum = 61ms, Average = 58ms

C:\Windows\system32>

That is just their site promoting ipv6 -- you do understand it world ipv6 day #2, or for real this time ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i don't care if its 1000 ISPs -- proxy is still a proxy, you are talking to google.com with the same IP as every other use of that proxy.. Just like a $2 ###### -- and why get the drips after ;)

I don't get your point, I know what is proxy but that's what we all use in every company.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"but that's what we all use in every company."

No that is not what EVERYONE uses, and clearly you don't understand what a proxy is is you don't understand what my point is.

So you use the proxy, and billy uses the proxy, and kevin uses the proxy and martin uses it, so does josh and ken -- just like any ######, now josh has herpes and kevin has crabs. So they both slept with the hooker 2 days before you did.

So now your wondering why you have crabs and herpes??

This is exactly what a proxy is.. So martin is infected with something and is bombing the **** of of google for requests for XYZ, now you come along using the same proxy as martin.. Can google tell you apart from martin.. No your using the same proxy, so your coming from the same IP as martin the virus infected guy.

So what do you think google tells you about your IP!!

Did you read what google stated? See the part about "If you share" your network connection -- that is what your doing when you use a proxy - your sharing! If this is a work connection, as stated in the message google gave then yes contact your IT dept about the problem. If these are just proxies your using because you want to hide your IP.. Either pick another $2 ###### to sleep with, maybe that one is clean ;) Never seen ISP force proxy use?? That would SUCK!!! But if so contact them about it, or just don't use the proxy and go direct.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What Budman is trying to elaborately explain, is that the proxy is telling Google that you and everyone else behind that proxy are using the same IP - which is to say the IP of the proxy, not your computer because it has been configured not to use "x-forwarded-for" to relay your computers specific information.

So you could have 500 people with the same IP try to reach Google's page. Now how would Google know whether it's "legit" or "suspicious" traffic.

It cannot - hence the error.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't know where did you get that definition of Proxy, but to make it short and more clear, I use Squid and MS Fore front, and rest of the story is :s

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What Budman is trying to elaborately explain, is that the proxy is telling Google that you and everyone else behind that proxy are using the same IP - which is to say the IP of the proxy, not your computer because it has been configure not to use "x-forwarded-for" to relay your computers specific information.

So you could have 500 people with the same IP try to reach Google's page. Now how would Google know whether it's "legit" or "suspicious" traffic.

It cannot - hence the error.

I can understand that, but the error is weird, it didn't mentioned about bandwidth but unusual traffic, and the IP address is incorrect. its not my Public IP address.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I love that definition of a proxy :laugh:

Basically, somebody else could be spamming Google with automated queries through that proxy to mask their real address, and since all Google sees is the IP of the proxy, it has no way of blocking the bad traffic vs. the good traffic, since it's all lumped together. Try accessing it directly (without the proxy) and see what results you get.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Are you sure that your ISP (or ISP's in your near vicinity) aren't using a forced proxy to filter content or log things?

The IP in question seems to be registered to:

Country: Pakistan State/Region: Sindh City: Karachi

ISP: Pakistan Telecom Company Limited

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The IP address listed in the first screenshot is in like 4 different spam block lists, it's not just Google you'll have problems with when using that proxy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The site you are going to just shows general IPv6 info, and The_Decryptor above is right, your proxy servers are getting blocked because everyone and their brother is using it, and likely some are using it maliciously towards google.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Are you sure that your ISP (or ISP's in your near vicinity) aren't using a forced proxy to filter content or log things?

The IP in question seems to be registered to:

Country: Pakistan State/Region: Sindh City: Karachi

ISP: Pakistan Telecom Company Limited

yea, I am sure its NOT My IP Address, Since I am managing all the IP Addresses & verified by different services :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The site you are going to just shows general IPv6 info, and The_Decryptor above is right, your proxy servers are getting blocked because everyone and their brother is using it, and likely some are using it maliciously towards google.

if Google blocked my proxy Server, then why it shows wrong IP Address ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"yea, I am sure its NOT My IP Address"

Who ever said it was YOUR ADDRESS -- that is the address that google sees you coming from.. Ie one of the 4 different proxies you said you were using.

When you say your proxy -- you mean one at your location, like squid or microsoft isa, etc. That you connect to on your local network, to then go to the internet.. And is that chained, or as mentioned does your ISP force a proxy?

that is the IP google sees you coming from.. Go to whatsmyip.org -- what does it show you for your IP?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"yea, I am sure its NOT My IP Address"

Who ever said it was YOUR ADDRESS -- that is the address that google sees you coming from.. Ie one of the 4 different proxies you said you were using.

When you say your proxy -- you mean one at your location, like squid or microsoft isa, etc. That you connect to on your local network, to then go to the internet.. And is that chained, or as mentioned does your ISP force a proxy?

that is the IP google sees you coming from.. Go to whatsmyip.org -- what does it show you for your IP?

whatsmyip shows my Actual and correct IP Address, (checked with every proxy and all are shown correct)

the weird thing was, when I checked that google.com/ipv6, at every proxy, it showed the same wrong IP Address.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Checked with every proxy??

So you have 4 internal proxies on your network? Each using a different ISP connection? Please give us a bit more info of how you connect to the internet. When you first stated you were using proxies, I assume proxies on the public net.. Are these proxies you talk about ones you maintain on your network, or your IT dept does? And your firewall only allows them to connect to the internet? Or are these proxies outside your network?

do you have any IPv6 setup at all? You going through a 6to4 tunnel or something?

So what your saying is that IP

inetnum: 182.178.0.0 - 182.178.255.255

netname: PTCL

descr: DSLAM Infrastructure North

country: PK

admin-c: IAB1-PK

tech-c: IAB1-PK

status: ASSIGNED NON-PORTABLE

source: APNIC

address: Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited.

So your saying that IP google is reporting is no where near you? Your not in PK?

if you go here what does it say?

http://www.lagado.com/proxy-test

post-14624-0-73214700-1338986162_thumb.j

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You've got the wrong end of the stick on this one Xahid.

What all of the others (often ineloquently) have said is entirely correct.

I'd also like to point out that your country filters internet traffic, so depending on how their routes are set up, you are likely bouncing through a public proxy that you aren't aware of.

For ****s and giggles, run a traceroute without reverseDNS lookup on and see if one of the IPs you are bouncing through matches.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"often ineloquently"

Come on!!! $2 ###### is pure eloquence plain and simple! ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"started talking about seepage."

seepage?? I never said anything of the sort??

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Checked with every proxy??

So you have 4 internal proxies on your network? Each using a different ISP connection? Please give us a bit more info of how you connect to the internet. When you first stated you were using proxies, I assume proxies on the public net.. Are these proxies you talk about ones you maintain on your network, or your IT dept does? And your firewall only allows them to connect to the internet? Or are these proxies outside your network?

do you have any IPv6 setup at all? You going through a 6to4 tunnel or something?

So what your saying is that IP

inetnum: 182.178.0.0 - 182.178.255.255

netname: PTCL

descr: DSLAM Infrastructure North

country: PK

admin-c: IAB1-PK

tech-c: IAB1-PK

status: ASSIGNED NON-PORTABLE

source: APNIC

address: Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited.

So your saying that IP google is reporting is no where near you? Your not in PK?

if you go here what does it say?

http://www.lagado.com/proxy-test

post-14624-0-73214700-1338986162_thumb.j

yes, I was talking about my 4 Internal Proxy Servers, each with different ISP connections, I don't use Public proxy. and I maintain all the proxy Servers, these Proxies have different jobs, (ie, One of the Voice/Video for specific dept, One of the Web only, and rest have some other tasks) and of course firewalls allow them on certain ports, everyone else is blocked. I am not using IPv6 at all.

I live in PK/Khi, but I am not using that Company as my Internet Service Provider,

and that IP Address is completely different from all my IP Address range.

Proxy Test

This request appears NOT to have come via a proxy

The Raw Details

Here are the raw details of the request received by this server.

Remote IP Address 20X.y.z

Request Protocol HTTP/1.1 Method GET

Request Headers Host www.lagado.com Connection keep-alive User-Agent Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 5.1) AppleWebKit/536.5 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/19.0.1084.46 Safari/536.5 Accept text/html,?application/xhtml+xml,?application/xml;q=0.9,?*/*;q=0.8 Referer http://www.neowin.ne...914059?__st__15 Accept-Encoding gzip,deflate,sdch Accept-Language en-US,en;q=0.8,ur;q=0.6 Accept-Charset ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.3

This Server Host www.lagado.com IP Address 210.50.6.232

Date: Wednesday 6 Jun 2012 22:40:12 GMT+1000

Please Note: The conclusion that the request did not come via a proxy is based on the absense of the Via, Forwarded, X-Forwarded-For and Client-ip headers. It is still possible that a proxy is handling the request without announcing itself in the recommended way. (see rfc2616 & draft-ietf-http-v10-spec-01 & Squid Configuration Guide &Squid Release Notes 1.1)

Update 08 Feb 2002 by Lagado: Added support for Client-ip header used by some transparent proxies. See more background.

Update 30 Apr 2001 by Lagado: Added Cache-Control: no-cache header to proxy-test responses. This discourages HTTP/1.1 compliant proxies from returning cached test results. Also freshened the document references.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This topic is now closed to further replies.