Track email address
When you send email using a "normal" email program, like Outlook, Outlook Express, Thunderbird, Eudora and the like, mail is sent using SMTP, or Simple Mail Transport Protocol. That's the same protocol that's used from server to server, as your mail makes its way from your machine, to your mail server, to the recipients's mail server to the recipient's machine.
Each step of that journey typically adds information to the mail header that documents which server (by name and IP address) received the message, from whom (again, by server name and IP address) and at what time.
So you can see that on the first leg of that journey, the internet IP address and machine name of the machine running your email program is typically one of the first things added to the information accompanying each message. That's usually your machine, and the IP address is either the address of that machine directly connected to the internet, or the internet IP address of any NAT router that you might be behind.
When you use an web-based mail program, such as GMail or MSN HotMail, you're not actually sending mail from your machine at all. You're using your browser to interact with a service that they provide on their servers. When you finally press send, the mail originates on the service's server, not your computer. If you take a look at the email headers for a message sent from a service such as GMail, you'll see only GMail servers and the servers required to deliver the message to its destination.
So, one would think that the information about what computer was used to access the web service in the first place is nowhere to be found. And, in fact, in my own test of GMail, that's what I found ... nothing. Nothing about the computer or IP address that I had used to compose and send the mail.
But...
There are two things you should be aware of.
I have seen HotMail add an "X-Originating-IP:" line to the headers of email. The "originating IP" is exactly that - the internet IP address of the computer used to compose the email. It's not always there, and I don't know what causes it to be placed there if it is. But if you're sending email from HotMail, you should know that it might be added to your outgoing email. I've not seen that from GMail, but it raises the second point...
Web servers log who's accessed them and when, by IP address. Services such as HotMail and GMail are really just web servers, so you know that they do log access, for both reading and sending mail. How long do they keep their logs? No idea. Can they correlate their access logs with emails being sent? I would assume so. Do they make this information public? Not without a court order.
And therein lies the issue ... you may not be able to trace where the email was sent from with only the information in the mail - but law enforcement, with the help of the email providers, may be able to. If (and it's a big if), they believe it's worth their time to do so.
So the bottom line is simply this: if the information is not in the email headers, and it doesn't appear to be for GMail, you and I, as "mere mortals" cannot trace where email came from. However, the service providers can. But because of all the privacy issues involved, I would expect, and even hope, that they would only do so in response to legal action of some sort.
Comments