This page is currently inactive and is retained for historical reference. Either the page is no longer relevant or consensus on its purpose has become unclear. To revive discussion, seek broader input via a forum such as the village pump. |
America Online |
There were historically many problems with AOL's proxy management system. Users rapidly cycled through thousands of IP addresses, making them virtually immune to MediaWiki's IP-based block methods. To make things worse, there were so many legitimate users operating from AOL that blocking all AOL IP addresses was impractical.
The solution came in late 2006, when AOL agreed to send X-Forwarded-For headers, which identified AOL users' home IP addresses and made it possible to block users directly, bypassing AOL's proxy system. This page is no longer relevant due to this agreement. |
64.12.96.0/19 | 64.12.96.0 – 64.12.127.255 |
149.174.160.0/20 | 149.174.160.0 – 149.174.175.255 |
152.163.0.0/16 | 152.163.0.0 – 152.163.255.255 |
195.93.0.0/17 | 195.93.0.0 – 195.93.127.255 |
198.81.0.0/19 | 198.81.0.0 – 198.81.31.255 |
202.67.64.128/25 | 202.67.64.128 – 202.67.64.255 |
205.188.0.0/16 | 205.188.0.0 – 205.188.255.255 |
207.200.112.0/21 | 207.200.112.0 – 207.200.119.255 |
See AOL Webmaster Info page for source data |
Abusive users from America Online (AOL) can be difficult to deal with. This page explains solutions to AOL users, and provides information on dealing with malicious users operating from AOL's anonymising proxy servers.