The contents of this legacy page are no longer maintained nor supported, and are made available only for historical purposes.

Bibliography Details

I. Poese, S. Uhlig, M.A. Kaafar, B. Donnet, and B. Gueye, "IP geolocation databases: unreliable?", ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review, vol. 41, no. 2, pp. 53-56, Apr 2011.

IP geolocation databases: unreliable?
Authors: I. Poese
S. Uhlig
M.A. Kaafar
B. Donnet
B. Gueye
Published: ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review, 2011
URL: http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=1971162.1971171
Entry Date: 2013-08-29
Abstract: The most widely used technique for IP geolocation consists in building a database to keep the mapping between IP blocks and a geographic location. Several databases are available and are frequently used by many services and web sites in the Internet. Contrary to widespread belief, geolocation databases are far from being as reliable as they claim. In this paper, we conduct a comparison of several current geolocation databases -both commercial and free- to have an insight of the limitations in their usability. First, the vast majority of entries in the databases refer only to a few popular countries (e.g., U.S.). This creates an imbalance in the representation of countries across the IP blocks of the databases. Second, these entries do not reflect the original allocation of IP blocks, nor BGP announcements. In addition, we quantify the accuracy of geolocation databases on a large European ISP based on ground truth information. This is the first study using a ground truth showing that the overly fine granularity of database entries makes their accuracy worse, not better. Geolocation databases can claim country-level accuracy, but certainly not city-level.