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Hi i was booted from a forum i have no idea why.So i thought i'd go to the library and use the computer there.I logged in got new email and user and joined to find out what the freakin hell was going on.They removed me from a public libbary.I never said who i was or any old info i might have had i was just a new member in their eyes so why would the boot me from a public computer? Can you join on a friends computer but use your own when your at your own home? Or will they pick up my Ip? thanks!

2006-06-27 04:04:17 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Internet

2 answers

My guess would be the "freakin" language you use, just like you did here, and may well get booted or warned about.
Swearing in public forums will almost always get you the boot, as will ignorance, rudeness, arguing or just plain being stupid.
You have to realize that themoderators of the forums are likely trying to maintain a "rated-G" setting, and act accordingly.
IP addresses are NOT assigned to your identity by the way!!!

2006-06-27 04:09:38 · answer #1 · answered by SuperTech 4 · 0 1

Yes, because you are assigned a specific IP for your domain name. They use a host header to map multiple websites. By assigning a unique host header name to each Web site, this feature permits you to map more than one Web site to an IP address. So the host header allows multiple users on their website, when you fill in the form your domain name is added to their list of users.
The DNS is essentially a hierarchical name space, where the hierarchical name structure allows the space to be efficiently searched and managed in a distributed fashion, but also supports one of the most desirable attributes for an identity space. The explicit hierarchy also assists in ensuring uniqueness, as DNS names areintended to be unique across the entire name string rather than just at the first component, so that "a.b.c" is a different identifier to "a.d.e " even though the first token in the domain names, "a", is the same in both cases.
The IP address identifies an interface, not a device or its user. The IP address is an information-bearing identifier, which is structured in such a way that it can be used in routing and
forwarding.

2006-06-27 11:07:05 · answer #2 · answered by The Y!ABut 6 · 0 0

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