Why does router connect to this ip?











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My router got disconnected and then this shows up in the router (linksys) router?
Check screenprint from the log:



enter image description here



100.66.180.13?



What kind of adress is that? Why is my router connected to this ip?
It leads to:
http://whatmyip.co/info/whois/100.66.180.13










share|improve this question
























  • no thats not my ip adress, also the new adress I got after the disconnection says I am sitting in a town 100s of miles from my home.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 9:09










  • Of course it is - and don't tell us that your adress is 10.0.0.2 or 127.0.0.1! Do you know what the IANA is?
    – flolilolilo
    Oct 6 '17 at 9:20






  • 1




    Don't just remove important information for the question with an edit.
    – Seth
    Oct 7 '17 at 11:27















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












My router got disconnected and then this shows up in the router (linksys) router?
Check screenprint from the log:



enter image description here



100.66.180.13?



What kind of adress is that? Why is my router connected to this ip?
It leads to:
http://whatmyip.co/info/whois/100.66.180.13










share|improve this question
























  • no thats not my ip adress, also the new adress I got after the disconnection says I am sitting in a town 100s of miles from my home.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 9:09










  • Of course it is - and don't tell us that your adress is 10.0.0.2 or 127.0.0.1! Do you know what the IANA is?
    – flolilolilo
    Oct 6 '17 at 9:20






  • 1




    Don't just remove important information for the question with an edit.
    – Seth
    Oct 7 '17 at 11:27













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











My router got disconnected and then this shows up in the router (linksys) router?
Check screenprint from the log:



enter image description here



100.66.180.13?



What kind of adress is that? Why is my router connected to this ip?
It leads to:
http://whatmyip.co/info/whois/100.66.180.13










share|improve this question















My router got disconnected and then this shows up in the router (linksys) router?
Check screenprint from the log:



enter image description here



100.66.180.13?



What kind of adress is that? Why is my router connected to this ip?
It leads to:
http://whatmyip.co/info/whois/100.66.180.13







networking router






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 24 at 20:30









Hennes

58.7k792141




58.7k792141










asked Oct 6 '17 at 9:01









TESO

61




61












  • no thats not my ip adress, also the new adress I got after the disconnection says I am sitting in a town 100s of miles from my home.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 9:09










  • Of course it is - and don't tell us that your adress is 10.0.0.2 or 127.0.0.1! Do you know what the IANA is?
    – flolilolilo
    Oct 6 '17 at 9:20






  • 1




    Don't just remove important information for the question with an edit.
    – Seth
    Oct 7 '17 at 11:27


















  • no thats not my ip adress, also the new adress I got after the disconnection says I am sitting in a town 100s of miles from my home.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 9:09










  • Of course it is - and don't tell us that your adress is 10.0.0.2 or 127.0.0.1! Do you know what the IANA is?
    – flolilolilo
    Oct 6 '17 at 9:20






  • 1




    Don't just remove important information for the question with an edit.
    – Seth
    Oct 7 '17 at 11:27
















no thats not my ip adress, also the new adress I got after the disconnection says I am sitting in a town 100s of miles from my home.
– TESO
Oct 6 '17 at 9:09




no thats not my ip adress, also the new adress I got after the disconnection says I am sitting in a town 100s of miles from my home.
– TESO
Oct 6 '17 at 9:09












Of course it is - and don't tell us that your adress is 10.0.0.2 or 127.0.0.1! Do you know what the IANA is?
– flolilolilo
Oct 6 '17 at 9:20




Of course it is - and don't tell us that your adress is 10.0.0.2 or 127.0.0.1! Do you know what the IANA is?
– flolilolilo
Oct 6 '17 at 9:20




1




1




Don't just remove important information for the question with an edit.
– Seth
Oct 7 '17 at 11:27




Don't just remove important information for the question with an edit.
– Seth
Oct 7 '17 at 11:27










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
5
down vote













It most definitely is your IP address. Your ISP is using Carrier-grade NAT:




IETF created RFC 6598, detailing Shared Address Space for use in ISP CGN deployments and NAT devices that can handle the same addresses occurring both on inbound and outbound interfaces. ARIN returned space to the IANA as needed for this allocation. The allocated address block is 100.64.0.0/10.




When connecting to services on the Internet, you will appear with any of the CGNAT system’s public IP addresses.






share|improve this answer





















  • its not my local ip adress and its not my ip adress I use on the internet.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:09






  • 3




    No, of course. Did you read the article on CGNAT? It’s a provider-local network. It is as “your IP address” as it gets.
    – Daniel B
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:24










  • Usually I have a a complete different ip adress/range - it for one dont start with 100., the reason why I am asking is this just showed up, and related to this I get a ip that is nowhere near my city so I am bit curious and worried whats going on.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:31








  • 2




    IP addresses have, at the very best, a loose location. You can just forget about that. With CGNAT it’s impossible anyway. Your traffic appears on “the Internet” when it leaves your ISP’s network. This is different from before, where the Internet was literally on the other side of your router. Your ISP might have installed CGNAT recently. Just ask them!
    – Daniel B
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:42






  • 2




    RFC 6598 section 7 identifies the IPv4 address range. Nicely done, Daniel B.
    – TOOGAM
    Oct 6 '17 at 11:17











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
5
down vote













It most definitely is your IP address. Your ISP is using Carrier-grade NAT:




IETF created RFC 6598, detailing Shared Address Space for use in ISP CGN deployments and NAT devices that can handle the same addresses occurring both on inbound and outbound interfaces. ARIN returned space to the IANA as needed for this allocation. The allocated address block is 100.64.0.0/10.




When connecting to services on the Internet, you will appear with any of the CGNAT system’s public IP addresses.






share|improve this answer





















  • its not my local ip adress and its not my ip adress I use on the internet.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:09






  • 3




    No, of course. Did you read the article on CGNAT? It’s a provider-local network. It is as “your IP address” as it gets.
    – Daniel B
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:24










  • Usually I have a a complete different ip adress/range - it for one dont start with 100., the reason why I am asking is this just showed up, and related to this I get a ip that is nowhere near my city so I am bit curious and worried whats going on.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:31








  • 2




    IP addresses have, at the very best, a loose location. You can just forget about that. With CGNAT it’s impossible anyway. Your traffic appears on “the Internet” when it leaves your ISP’s network. This is different from before, where the Internet was literally on the other side of your router. Your ISP might have installed CGNAT recently. Just ask them!
    – Daniel B
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:42






  • 2




    RFC 6598 section 7 identifies the IPv4 address range. Nicely done, Daniel B.
    – TOOGAM
    Oct 6 '17 at 11:17















up vote
5
down vote













It most definitely is your IP address. Your ISP is using Carrier-grade NAT:




IETF created RFC 6598, detailing Shared Address Space for use in ISP CGN deployments and NAT devices that can handle the same addresses occurring both on inbound and outbound interfaces. ARIN returned space to the IANA as needed for this allocation. The allocated address block is 100.64.0.0/10.




When connecting to services on the Internet, you will appear with any of the CGNAT system’s public IP addresses.






share|improve this answer





















  • its not my local ip adress and its not my ip adress I use on the internet.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:09






  • 3




    No, of course. Did you read the article on CGNAT? It’s a provider-local network. It is as “your IP address” as it gets.
    – Daniel B
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:24










  • Usually I have a a complete different ip adress/range - it for one dont start with 100., the reason why I am asking is this just showed up, and related to this I get a ip that is nowhere near my city so I am bit curious and worried whats going on.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:31








  • 2




    IP addresses have, at the very best, a loose location. You can just forget about that. With CGNAT it’s impossible anyway. Your traffic appears on “the Internet” when it leaves your ISP’s network. This is different from before, where the Internet was literally on the other side of your router. Your ISP might have installed CGNAT recently. Just ask them!
    – Daniel B
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:42






  • 2




    RFC 6598 section 7 identifies the IPv4 address range. Nicely done, Daniel B.
    – TOOGAM
    Oct 6 '17 at 11:17













up vote
5
down vote










up vote
5
down vote









It most definitely is your IP address. Your ISP is using Carrier-grade NAT:




IETF created RFC 6598, detailing Shared Address Space for use in ISP CGN deployments and NAT devices that can handle the same addresses occurring both on inbound and outbound interfaces. ARIN returned space to the IANA as needed for this allocation. The allocated address block is 100.64.0.0/10.




When connecting to services on the Internet, you will appear with any of the CGNAT system’s public IP addresses.






share|improve this answer












It most definitely is your IP address. Your ISP is using Carrier-grade NAT:




IETF created RFC 6598, detailing Shared Address Space for use in ISP CGN deployments and NAT devices that can handle the same addresses occurring both on inbound and outbound interfaces. ARIN returned space to the IANA as needed for this allocation. The allocated address block is 100.64.0.0/10.




When connecting to services on the Internet, you will appear with any of the CGNAT system’s public IP addresses.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Oct 6 '17 at 9:20









Daniel B

32.8k75986




32.8k75986












  • its not my local ip adress and its not my ip adress I use on the internet.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:09






  • 3




    No, of course. Did you read the article on CGNAT? It’s a provider-local network. It is as “your IP address” as it gets.
    – Daniel B
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:24










  • Usually I have a a complete different ip adress/range - it for one dont start with 100., the reason why I am asking is this just showed up, and related to this I get a ip that is nowhere near my city so I am bit curious and worried whats going on.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:31








  • 2




    IP addresses have, at the very best, a loose location. You can just forget about that. With CGNAT it’s impossible anyway. Your traffic appears on “the Internet” when it leaves your ISP’s network. This is different from before, where the Internet was literally on the other side of your router. Your ISP might have installed CGNAT recently. Just ask them!
    – Daniel B
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:42






  • 2




    RFC 6598 section 7 identifies the IPv4 address range. Nicely done, Daniel B.
    – TOOGAM
    Oct 6 '17 at 11:17


















  • its not my local ip adress and its not my ip adress I use on the internet.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:09






  • 3




    No, of course. Did you read the article on CGNAT? It’s a provider-local network. It is as “your IP address” as it gets.
    – Daniel B
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:24










  • Usually I have a a complete different ip adress/range - it for one dont start with 100., the reason why I am asking is this just showed up, and related to this I get a ip that is nowhere near my city so I am bit curious and worried whats going on.
    – TESO
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:31








  • 2




    IP addresses have, at the very best, a loose location. You can just forget about that. With CGNAT it’s impossible anyway. Your traffic appears on “the Internet” when it leaves your ISP’s network. This is different from before, where the Internet was literally on the other side of your router. Your ISP might have installed CGNAT recently. Just ask them!
    – Daniel B
    Oct 6 '17 at 10:42






  • 2




    RFC 6598 section 7 identifies the IPv4 address range. Nicely done, Daniel B.
    – TOOGAM
    Oct 6 '17 at 11:17
















its not my local ip adress and its not my ip adress I use on the internet.
– TESO
Oct 6 '17 at 10:09




its not my local ip adress and its not my ip adress I use on the internet.
– TESO
Oct 6 '17 at 10:09




3




3




No, of course. Did you read the article on CGNAT? It’s a provider-local network. It is as “your IP address” as it gets.
– Daniel B
Oct 6 '17 at 10:24




No, of course. Did you read the article on CGNAT? It’s a provider-local network. It is as “your IP address” as it gets.
– Daniel B
Oct 6 '17 at 10:24












Usually I have a a complete different ip adress/range - it for one dont start with 100., the reason why I am asking is this just showed up, and related to this I get a ip that is nowhere near my city so I am bit curious and worried whats going on.
– TESO
Oct 6 '17 at 10:31






Usually I have a a complete different ip adress/range - it for one dont start with 100., the reason why I am asking is this just showed up, and related to this I get a ip that is nowhere near my city so I am bit curious and worried whats going on.
– TESO
Oct 6 '17 at 10:31






2




2




IP addresses have, at the very best, a loose location. You can just forget about that. With CGNAT it’s impossible anyway. Your traffic appears on “the Internet” when it leaves your ISP’s network. This is different from before, where the Internet was literally on the other side of your router. Your ISP might have installed CGNAT recently. Just ask them!
– Daniel B
Oct 6 '17 at 10:42




IP addresses have, at the very best, a loose location. You can just forget about that. With CGNAT it’s impossible anyway. Your traffic appears on “the Internet” when it leaves your ISP’s network. This is different from before, where the Internet was literally on the other side of your router. Your ISP might have installed CGNAT recently. Just ask them!
– Daniel B
Oct 6 '17 at 10:42




2




2




RFC 6598 section 7 identifies the IPv4 address range. Nicely done, Daniel B.
– TOOGAM
Oct 6 '17 at 11:17




RFC 6598 section 7 identifies the IPv4 address range. Nicely done, Daniel B.
– TOOGAM
Oct 6 '17 at 11:17


















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