IP Trackers is operated by Theodore Uzun, the founder and developer of the site. The site was built to make everyday network diagnostics easier to understand: public IP lookup, ISP and ASN context, DNS and WHOIS checks, proxy detection, and VPN leak verification. Theodore maintains both the product experience and the editorial workflow, which is why the site connects tools with explanations instead of treating them as separate pages. You can read the editor profile on the
author page.
IP Trackers helps users understand what their public network footprint looks like at a practical level. When you open the homepage or run one of our tools, we resolve the visible public IP and enrich it with contextual metadata such as country, region, city estimate, ASN, timezone, and provider-level routing hints. We also provide focused utilities like DNS lookup, WHOIS/RDAP lookup, reverse DNS, ASN lookup, proxy checks, DNS leak testing, and WebRTC leak testing, so users can validate not only "what is my IP," but also how traffic may be routed and where privacy risks may exist.
IP intelligence is useful, but it has real limits. Geolocation is an estimate based on allocation and routing data, not precise GPS. ASN and ISP ownership can show which network announces an address, but they do not identify a specific person. Reverse DNS names can add context, but they are labels and should not be treated as proof by themselves. For that reason, our goal is to show a complete diagnostic workflow: combine multiple signals, compare before and after states, and avoid drawing conclusions from one data point.
We design the product around privacy-aware diagnostics. Tools are intended for troubleshooting, network visibility, and educational use, not for stalking or misuse. We do not present exact home addresses, and we clearly communicate that IP location is approximate. For users testing VPN setups, our guidance emphasizes verification over marketing: validate IP change, then test DNS and WebRTC behavior, then review ASN and routing context. If you want deeper policy details, review our
Privacy Policy and
Methodology pages.
Our audience includes everyday users checking their public IP, professionals validating DNS and email reputation signals, developers debugging network behavior, support teams handling routing complaints, and privacy-focused users who want to verify if a VPN configuration is actually working. The platform is intentionally structured so beginners can get immediate answers while advanced users can continue into deeper tooling and guides.
We continue to improve the platform around three priorities: reliable diagnostics, clear explanations, and practical action paths. In 2026 the roadmap is focused on richer tool explanations, stronger long-tail troubleshooting guides, clearer VPN verification flows, and tighter cross-page fact consistency so users do not see one server count, privacy claim, or feature list on one page and a different version elsewhere. The objective is simple: help users make better network and privacy decisions with transparent, testable information.