IP users, guest users, or unregistered users are users who edit Wikipedia without registering for an account. The term "IP user" comes from the fact that when such a user edits, Wikipedia annotates the edit with the IP address of the computer from which the edit was made, whereas if the user were logged in, it would show the username of the editor who made it. These substitutes for usernames may have the following general forms:

  • IPv4: x.x.x.x where x is a number bigger than 0 and smaller than 255
  • IPv6: y:y:y:y:y:y:y:y where y is a number between 0 and 65535, written in hexadecimal

IP user edits are estimated to constitute one-half (54% in 2013) of the general username activity levels. So, among the total daily edits, then about one-third are posted by IP users, while 2/3 (~67%) are logged to specific usernames each time.[clarification needed]

While registered editors only occasionally possess one or two legitimate alternate usernames, IP users frequently contribute from different IP addresses because Internet service providers (ISPs) usually assign IP addresses dynamically, meaning that the same actual person may return to Wikipedia with a different IP address that was re-assigned by the ISP. This often makes it difficult to tell whether an IP user is a total newcomer or a returning editor. Another factor is that multiple people can use the same IP address (via network address translation), such as students at a school or employees at a business.

See also

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About IP addresses in general

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About editing Wikipedia with or without an account

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