How to get unique IPs/hosting?

mikeshinobi

Throbbing Member
Nov 15, 2011
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Indiana, US
mattcutts.com
I feel completely retarded asking this, because I don't even know how to ask it correctly (otherwise I'd just Google it).

So, there are all these guys who have like 50 blogs in their super secret blog networks, with each blog "on a unique C class IP". My question is, how did they do that? Do they get a new hosting plan for each individual domain, or do they use reseller hosting somehow (they "sell themselves" hosting?), or what's the deal?
 


"Seo hosting" is a myth, It does nothing for you except remove money from your wallet by paying higher prices for an IP.

The only TRUE way to separate your sites if that is your goal is to purchase hosting accounts at several geographically different locations not connected to the same network.

But if you just HAVE to have "a unique C class IP" (which does not exist btw) There are many "seo hosts" here that can sell you what you need.
 
"Seo hosting" is a myth, It does nothing for you except remove money from your wallet by paying higher prices for an IP.

The only TRUE way to separate your sites if that is your goal is to purchase hosting accounts at several geographically different locations not connected to the same network.

But if you just HAVE to have "a unique C class IP" (which does not exist btw) There are many "seo hosts" here that can sell you what you need.

Hmm... okay, interesting. To be honest I don't even really know what a "unique C class IP" is, but everyone always talks about it like it's super important.

So in that case, is it okay if I link to one of my sites from another one of my own sites if I have them both on the same hosting? I've always been under the impression that it's bad to do that.
 
The Internet uses CIDR which breaks up IP ranges so I almost agree with the "SEO hosting" is a myth thing. I think that having a couple of shared hosting plans with no more than 5 sites, you should be ok mr shin
 
The Internet uses CIDR which breaks up IP ranges so I almost agree with the "SEO hosting" is a myth thing. I think that having a couple of shared hosting plans with no more than 5 sites, you should be ok mr shin

This guy gets it :thumbsup:
 
Yeah Mike, throw away everything you've heard about unique C Class IP seperation. This myth is now strictly perpetuated to sell more expensive hosting plans to WaFo members.

The only time I even bother putting my domains on seperate IPs at all is when I want COMPETITION to not be able to connect the two. -Google is a registrar though, it knows whatever the fuck it wants to know.
 
Yeah Mike, throw away everything you've heard about unique C Class IP seperation. This myth is now strictly perpetuated to sell more expensive hosting plans to WaFo members.

The only time I even bother putting my domains on seperate IPs at all is when I want COMPETITION to not be able to connect the two. -Google is a registrar though, it knows whatever the fuck it wants to know.

Sorry lukep. I think i have to disagree. While google know whatever the fuck it wants to know, it won't try to know whatever the fuck it wants to know without putting into a lot of work. Basically they can find out if they try, but they won't. So I think IP separation works until you pissed them off really bad. Then they hunt you down IP separation or not. I've known ppls who avoid multiple adsense accounts banned by different hosting/IPs. I think gamer_boys and secretagent can attest to that.
 
The action of award the host name (or area name) from an IP abode involves sending a bulletin to the IP abode and requesting the computer amid at that IP abode to acknowledgment its name. Usually this will be the aforementioned as the area name.
 
Maybe a little off-topic, but somewhat relevant.
In regards to shared hosting, is there any way your site could possibly be penalized for being in the same block as a "bad site"

Take bad site to mean what you want. A penalized site, a site that may be harmful to your computer, etc
 
As we are into business of hosting from few month C class in my view is the custom ip that you purchase separately companies charge Dollar for that
 
Register in "no-ip()com" and get your desired ip. You can get more features and tools they have in their site.
 
Its all based on what your looking to do with your SEO setup, this model isnt for everyone. Some guys push serious dollar amounts through their setups and want the know that they are not sharing their ip community with joe shmoo spammer or blackhatter that might affect their rankings and have killer support and up time.

For a lot of people its a convenience thing, being able to control their entire SEO setup from a single panel is a hell of a lot easier then having to handle many accounts from many hosts. It all comes down to what your comfortable with and how many hosting accounts you want to deal with. It can be done cheaper buy finding a ton of shared accounts but the the convenience of SEO hosting is usually worth it for guys doing higher level stuff.

Plus it never hurts to have your sites setup on diverse C blocks and geographic diversity, but it really never hurts to Know who is sharing the ip with you or that no one else is using that ip. Getting grouped into a bad community is really no fun, especially after you spent a ton of time trying to build your site and back links only to find out the guys next to you are backhatters.
 
Yea I don't believe in SEO hosting, I do not think unique hosting and non-unique hosting even matters.
 
Maybe a little off-topic, but somewhat relevant.
In regards to shared hosting, is there any way your site could possibly be penalized for being in the same block as a "bad site"

Take bad site to mean what you want. A penalized site, a site that may be harmful to your computer, etc

It use to happen, but apparently pretty rare these days, unless Google fucks up like they did earlier this year. They smacked a lotta parked domains (that had nothing on them except advertising) that were ranking, and somehow managed to get a bunch of sites (that were legit sites) that were on the same neighborhood while they were at it.
 
Simple get a dedicated server with multiple dedicated IPs and create virtual hosts on it and assign each IP to a different host. And then host each site/blog on a different host with its own IP. If you buy server from some big host, they might give you different geographical IPs.