IP Tracking is the process of identifying and analyzing the IP (Internet Protocol) addresses of visitors to a website. It helps website owners understand where their visitors are coming from and how they interact with the site. Think of IP Tracking like a guestbook at an event—it records where web users are visiting from regionally, to help planners understand engagement without collecting private details like names and exact addresses.
IP tracking helps planners understand and improve public engagement in online planning initiatives. It can provide insights into:
Who is engaging? Track visitor locations (at a broad level, like city or region) to ensure diverse participation.
How are people interacting? Identify which pages, surveys, or maps get the most attention.
Preventing duplicate feedback – Helps detect spam or multiple survey responses from the same IP.
Evaluating outreach effectiveness – Measure how well an online campaign is reaching different neighborhoods.
For example, a city planning department is hosting an interactive zoning feedback map. They use IP tracking to ensure responses come from residents instead of spam bots and identify which neighborhoods are underrepresented in engagement.
Inform users why tracking is being used and how data will be handled.
Do not collect personally identifiable information (PII).
Follow GDPR (Europe) and CCPA (California) privacy laws if applicable.
Focus on broad trends, not individual tracking.
Example: Instead of tracking one user's activity, analyze how many users from different ZIP codes engage with your platform.
If using IP tracking in surveys, avoid blocking multiple responses unless necessary (e.g., limiting one response per household).
Offer anonymous participation options where possible.
Publish a clear privacy policy on your website.
Provide a way for users to disable tracking via browser settings or a consent banner.