Google Patents Use of geo-location data for spam detectionĭownload PDF Info Publication number US7366919B1 US7366919B1 US10/424,532 US42453203A US7366919B1 US 7366919 B1 US7366919 B1 US 7366919B1 US 42453203 A US42453203 A US 42453203A US 7366919 B1 US7366919 B1 US 7366919B1 Authority US United States Prior art keywords mail computer actual geo address Prior art date Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.) Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.) Active, expires Application number US10/424,532 Inventor William E Sobel Bruce McCorkendale Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. However, I find it rather frustrating that the Geobyte IP Locator that ProZ uses very rarely works: most of the time I get the annoying 'We are unable to locate the address whatever IP at this time.' message. Original Assignee Symantec Corp Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Thats the purpose of the 'Original IP Address' column. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.) Filing date Publication date Family has litigation US case filed in California Central District Court litigation Critical Source: District Court Jurisdiction: California Central District Court "Unified Patents Litigation Data" by Unified Patents is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Application filed by Symantec Corp filed Critical Symantec Corp Priority to US10/424,532 priority Critical patent/US7366919B1/en Assigned to SYMANTEC CORPORATION reassignment SYMANTEC CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). In this case, you will need to research your local provider's documentation and possibly seek their assistance.Assignors: MCCORKENDALE, BRUCE, SOBEL, WILLIAM E. If you do not have shell access, then you may still be able to complete the following steps via cPanel or an equivalent facility, but unfortunately I am unable to provide you with step by step instructions to do this as each provider's facilities are different. () to establish a SSH session with your server. If you don't know what that means then check your hosting company's FAQ - they will probably recommend that you use something like Putty Note: The above instructions assume that you have SSH access to your server. There are some sample queries in our Map Implementation Guide, and there is a sample PHP script for performing the actual IP to location look-ups here. Once the installation script has completed, then you will be able to access the data via embedded SQL queries in your PHP code. Note: The script that you want the cron job to run is install_update.sh If your hosting provider has restricted command line access to crontab, then you may need to create the cron job manually via cPanel or an equivalent facility. Upon completion, it will check that the importation was successful and will create a cron job that is configured to execute once per day and check for and install any map updates. The script will then create the required tables in the database, and import the raw data in to the tables. The installation script will then prompt you for your Geobytes' Access Credentials (that were emailed to you when you purchased your GeoNetMap subscription/license) and the database name, user, and password that it should use for access to your local MySql database. (You need to enter them at a command/shell prompt.) Once you have established a command line session with your server, then download the installation archive in to an empty directory on your server, (perhaps create a geobytes directory in your home directory), then extract the contents of the archive, and then finally run the installation script. The following process will work on both shared and dedicated server environments. We have automated the process of installing and maintaining an instance of our IP Address Map database – GeoNetMap in a LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySql, PHP) environment. How to install and maintain a GeoNetMap instance in a LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySql, PHP) environment. direct access to the raw data within your own local SQL database.You just run a single installation script that we provide which will download and import the data in to your local database, and then access the data from within your PHP application – once again most likely using one of our sample scripts as a template (see links below). If you are running in a LAMP environment (Linux, Apache, MySql, PHP) and require a database centric solution, then getting the data imported and accessible from within your application is very straight forward – you don’t need to install or run any special software.
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