yes using IP and MAC we can track the location & area & which site & which page and all. using IP we track.
Email hackers are generally tracked by Cyber crime police. They can track the IP address of the hacker. With the IP address, they can track the location of person.
WikiAnswers Supervisors and Community Assistants can see all contributions by an IP address.
Sometimes-for example, if the user has a dynamic IP address, and their IP address changes within this system as usual, it can generally be tracked. If the user uses a proxy service to make their IP address appear as if it is located in some random other part of the world, it may be more difficult to track.
Not down to the exact degree of latitude/longitude, but you can get pretty close to where the computer using that IP is by tracking the IP.
Yes, you can track your IP address by using a dynamic DNS service (the ones I’ve used are free).
Yes you can track any device by using what is called a a MAC address. Every device on this planet has a mac address that can be tracked.
Yes they can. Do they? I don't know if they all do, but they certainly can.
Nope, that's something NOBODY can do.
Yes, answers by people who are not logged in are represented by the IP address they used at the time of the answer (this helps track vandals at the site)
That wouldn't make much sense. Most people don't care about their IP addresses and don't know them. Many people don't even have a fixed IP address. Every time I connect to the Internet, my ISP assigns a temporary IP address, but this address can change at any moment - the ISP seems to have several IP addresses, and I get assigned one of them randomly. Also, the IP address I use is shared by many other users. In consequence, anybody that manages to track my IP address can basically track me up to the ISP. From there, to distinguish my data traffic from other users, such a person would need the cooperation of the ISP. In summary, an IP address is often quite useless to uniquely track a person. All of the above refers to the public IP address, as seen from the outside world. The private IP address is even less useless; most computers have similar IP addresses, such as 10.0.0.2 or 192.168.0.2, which are not unique worldwide; rather, millions of computers all over the world have the private address 10.0.0.2, for example.
EVERY email you send has a hidden 'header' - identifying the sender, along with their IP address. It's a simple procedure for the police to get your address details using your IP address from your service provider !