this post was submitted on 18 Jul 2026
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I pinged every IP address that wasn't reserved. The image is 8k by 8k and is re-encoded as an AVIF to be friendlier to mobile devices. Like every other survey done, it is using a Hilbert Curve to convert the linear address space to a contiguous 2d space. The hotter the colors (blue is coolest), the denser the ping responses were.

(If you are interested the full-resolution pyramidal-tiled TIFF can be downloaded and viewed in QuPath on desktop. I've also compressed the ping response data into its own format down to about 150 MB. PM me for a link)

Non-proxied image

Here is a 2006 survey to compare.

Some observations: Big Tech (USA) is in the top left. US government allocations, for the most part, did not respond to any pings. And maybe you didn't realize this before, but Multicast (Class D) & Class E consume a whopping 12% of the IPv4 range.

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[โ€“] sacred_font@infosec.pub 21 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Comparison is the thief of joy ๐Ÿ™ƒ

Though if I push my scanner hard it could probably do 16k/sec on the single core and 1gig connection it is on. The problem is how reliably I could do 16k/sec over the network, since a good portion would be dropped even if the host's hardware could keep up.

I'd probably need access to enterprise-level equipment that could handle the routing load if I were to do it in 5 seconds lol, it's insane they managed to do that