Clarification of "Unique IP" given public IP and non-routable IPs
How are Unique IP addresses determined? For example, if there are 3 workstations in a single location that utilize DHCP, so that all "share" the same public IP but each obviously has its own non-routable IP address, would that count as 3 unique visitors logged (and reported) if all 3 visited the same URL at the same time?
Thanks.
Thanks.
Imagine a corporative organization where the user access to an intranet using their office connections, the most logical infraestructure design will use a proxy or firewall for user to connect, so , in the web servers will be registered a bunch of IP from the proxy/firewall. The timeout settings will not reflect the number of real visitors in the web site.