(Total Views: 4102)
Posted On: 07/25/2025 10:01:54 PM
Post# of 263
Ok I’m back!
Great question and you’re not alone! IP behavior can definitely be confusing at first, but here’s a breakdown of what the log is actually showing:
What an IP Address Tells Us:
An IP (Internet Protocol) address is like a digital return address for where someone connects to the internet from — but it’s often shared by multiple users in the same location or network.
What the Match Log Suggests:
In this case, the same three people are accessing the site at the same time on multiple days — and on each of those days, they share the same IP address. That tells us a few key things:
1. They’re likely in the same physical location or office (e.g. same Wi-Fi or network).
2. Their IP changes daily — which usually means they’re on a dynamic IP system, like what most home networks or small companies use. (The router gets a new IP every so often from their internet provider.)
3. The fact that all three share the same IP on each individual day strongly suggests they’re on the same network — whether that’s a workplace, university, or shared VPN.
So Why Is It Helpful?
The consistency in timing + shared IP across days supports the idea that these individuals are coordinating or part of the same group/entity. It doesn’t prove identity, but in context, it’s a strong behavioral and technical fingerprint — especially when combined with usernames, access logs, or post behavior.
Hope that clears it up! Let me know if you want me to mark the access trail or create a visual map of the IP sequences.
Best,
Riz
Great question and you’re not alone! IP behavior can definitely be confusing at first, but here’s a breakdown of what the log is actually showing:
What an IP Address Tells Us:
An IP (Internet Protocol) address is like a digital return address for where someone connects to the internet from — but it’s often shared by multiple users in the same location or network.
What the Match Log Suggests:
In this case, the same three people are accessing the site at the same time on multiple days — and on each of those days, they share the same IP address. That tells us a few key things:
1. They’re likely in the same physical location or office (e.g. same Wi-Fi or network).
2. Their IP changes daily — which usually means they’re on a dynamic IP system, like what most home networks or small companies use. (The router gets a new IP every so often from their internet provider.)
3. The fact that all three share the same IP on each individual day strongly suggests they’re on the same network — whether that’s a workplace, university, or shared VPN.
So Why Is It Helpful?
The consistency in timing + shared IP across days supports the idea that these individuals are coordinating or part of the same group/entity. It doesn’t prove identity, but in context, it’s a strong behavioral and technical fingerprint — especially when combined with usernames, access logs, or post behavior.
Hope that clears it up! Let me know if you want me to mark the access trail or create a visual map of the IP sequences.
Best,
Riz


Daniel Rizzo
Federal Whistleblower
Case References
• HHS & SEC Whistleblower: HL-1412396
• DOJ Investigation Report / Whistleblower ID: 20250705-0001
• NIH Case Reference: CS1137565
• DoD Case: 16282
• IC IG / 50 U.S.C. §3033 / ARPA-H (Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health)
Founder & CEO
FireGate BioTech | AI Lux Veritas™
Contact FireGate Biotech
NotYourDrug.com: https://www.notyourdrug.com
Federal Whistleblower
Case References
• HHS & SEC Whistleblower: HL-1412396
• DOJ Investigation Report / Whistleblower ID: 20250705-0001
• NIH Case Reference: CS1137565
• DoD Case: 16282
• IC IG / 50 U.S.C. §3033 / ARPA-H (Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health)
Founder & CEO
FireGate BioTech | AI Lux Veritas™
Contact FireGate Biotech
NotYourDrug.com: https://www.notyourdrug.com