I am Shades.. a host of over 1,200 events for VegasWorld.com. I was banned after hosting my last event, as I shared date-stamped copyright material to what I thought were the proper avenues through email to the corporation. They went without reply. I was voted to beta-test for the game, months earlier, and provided my IP address. I believe this is what was used to gain entry into my system. My last event was on October 13th, 2014. On November 11th, 2014, there was an unauthorized attempt on my main "live" account. They did not know of this account. Over a dozen emails were forwarded to there, from another email address which was compromised, which I had used to send my date-stamped ideas from. On November 18th, my computer was completely disabled. My system was hacked into before November 10th. I lost hundreds of passwords, hundreds of html codes, resell licenses, files for over 260 ad exchanges in 4 countries, and much more. I do not know if any of this may be retrieved, and it was about 5-6 years of work. Please do reply with any information. It may have been to eliminate my evidence and/or thieve my resources, etc. I do have a suspect in mind, and my copyrights were relevant to many concepts for themes, outfits, and an on-game recruitment for marketing system. Other innovative information was presented. This person or people destroyed so much that could be. Why eliminate their biggest host, when I produced revenues out of my own pocket. I believe this individual is staff level.
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DNSBL* - is a list of IP addresses published through the Internet Domain Name Service (DNS) either as a zone file that can be used by DNS server software, or as a live DNS zone that can be queried in real-time. DNSBLs are most often used to publish the addresses of computers or networks linked to spamming; most mail server software can be configured to reject or flag messages which have been sent from a site listed on one or more such lists.
WHOIS** - is a query/response protocol that is widely used for querying databases in order to determine the registrant or assignee of Internet resources, such as a domain name, an IP address block, or an autonomous system number. WHOIS lookups were traditionally performed with a command line interface application, and network administrators predominantly still use this method, but many simplified web-based tools exist. WHOIS services are typically communicated using the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP). Servers listen to requests on the well-known port number 43.
** Approximate Geographic Location - This is NOT the exact geographical location of the person/organization with the given IP address. However, this should still give you a good idea about the area/region where this person/orgranization is located.