Thats good for an example, ideally no ISP will give out the single digit last octets; they are mostly reserved for internal routing and administration.
The two IPs you suggested are completely separate.
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The reason is that I worked in a company, the company may use the internet by themselves, each pc has an identity ip, when I check online, I find that each pc's ip has one digit different
I am very sure the ip is external, not internal, for example, if you go to any school library, they use the same thing, each pc has different ip, but the ip is very similar, only one digit different.
but for me, I am in a company which using these own internet service, so I just need to know if it is safe to create another one
I am very sure the ip is external, not internal, for example, if you go to any school library, they use the same thing, each pc has different ip, but the ip is very similar, only one digit different.
but for me, I am in a company which using these own internet service, so I just need to know if it is safe to create another one
If you don't mind, share the first two octets (XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX), we will be able to tell you if it is internal or public IP.
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