wow this was scary
Most ölikely it was you who tried to log in all the time. Maybe your ISP just showed the wrong location. AS far as its not a different country at all i wouldnt be concerned.
thats what im thinking now aswell, i dont know why my ip would have changed though.
Its just your ISP flagging you as in a different state. Your ISP can route you through any number of exchanges. The major ones are the ones that are used to determine your location.
I live in North East Wales in the UK, but my ISP still flags me as logging on in london. A good 200+ miles away. This is due to the way my ISP handles my info.
Time Warner cable @ times reports their customers to be elsewhere other than their actual city
so more then likely my net service made some adjustments somewhere, thanks for the quick replies.
ArenaNet Communications Manager
Most ölikely it was you who tried to log in all the time. Maybe your ISP just showed the wrong location. AS far as its not a different country at all i wouldnt be concerned.
Sorry, but this is bad advice. A lot of account thieves use proxies that make their access appear to come from, say, California or Kentucky or Quebec or Paris, when in fact they’re nowhere close to those locations.
If you see any access attempt coming from a reasonable distance, I’d block it.
Communications Manager
Guild & Fansite Relations; In-Game Events
ArenaNet
You should have an idea of what your IP address should look like.
If you get an email with an IP address and you aren’t confident if it is yours, or if you just want to check, you can go to sites like whatsmyip.org to have it shown to you if you don’t know where to look. Or, check in your router’s admin pages for a status display -- your IP should be there, as well.
In any case, never just approve any old IP.
You should have an idea of what your IP address should look like.
If you get an email with an IP address and you aren’t confident if it is yours, or if you just want to check, you can go to sites like whatsmyip.org to have it shown to you if you don’t know where to look. Or, check in your router’s admin pages for a status display — your IP should be there, as well.In any case, never just approve any old IP.
Either http://whatismyip.com (not .org) or http://ping.eu.
Router admin pages may show you useless or incorrect information regarding this issue if you local ISP provides you with IP from internal network (ip ranges 192.168.0.0-192.168.255.255 or 10.0.0.0-10.255.255.255) instead of external IP address.