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Thread: AIM tracking question

  1. #11
    ********** |ceWriterguy
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Posts
    1,608
    If it's an IP to say, a library, you're absolutely correct that they have nothing they can use. You seem to be presuming that AOL will be required to give out said information. The fact of the matter at hand is that AOL's AIM is the software in question - so their own people would be enforcing its usage. You're right on not being able to prove who was at the keyboard even on a residential account. AOL solves this by denying its services to the account and not the people at the keyboard. Nobody uses an AOL account once it's 'TOSsed' without contacting AOL directly and addressing the problem.
    Even a broken watch is correct twice a day.

    Which coder said that nobody could outcode Microsoft in their own OS? Write a bit and make a fortune!

  2. #12
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Posts
    1,199
    Yea, thats exactly what said in my other post. the most they will do it deactivate the account. If somone is harassing you they arent going to complain to AOL when their account gets shut down, unless of course they are absolute morons.
    Everyone is going to die, I am just as good of a reason as any.

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  3. #13
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Posts
    25
    I know that when u send someone a file if u go into dos (or what they claim is dos now) and use netstat you get an ip address. I don't know if it is an aol ip or the actual computer ip but you can always look into it.

  4. #14
    Anonymizer is what we use, they've been subpoenaed and they don't keep any records to subpoena. Aim> Direct connect > nestat -ano 4 > screenshot, that's all it takes.

    Actually, the authorities can trace you back even if you have dial-up. Though the case was a murder not a simple online threat. I watched as the FBI subpoenaed mapquest for records of IP addresses requesting map searches of a small town in Iowa before the time of the murders. Some they gave them were AOL accounts, AOL was subpoenaed to handover some history and other info which led them to the guy's mothers house where he did the original map search from another state.

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