Proxies

Buy, sell, and review residential, mobile, and datacenter proxies
look, after that whole geo-targeted proxy meltdown last month i decided to build my own little residential pool. rented 20 sims from different mvnos, some cheap android burners, set up a python rotator that was supposed to be genius. bragging rights lasted about a week. now my scrapers are getting 403'd faster than i can debug. it's like the sites see me coming even when the ips are clean residential. all the anti-detect browser tweaks i layered on top are just making latency awful. serp tracking for my pbns is now completely broken. google's core updates are mostly just a game of footprint whack-a-mole for smart operators, but this feels like my own footprint is a giant neon sign. guess i was too clever for my own good lmao. anyone else tried this sim card route and not had it blow up in their face? or do i just accept that even a diy pool needs some black box provider magic to actually work.
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So I've been crunching numbers on residential proxies lately, trying to get a clear picture of what I'm really paying per GB. I tested a handful of providers, and the results are pretty revealing. Provider A charges $50 for 10 GB, which is 5 bucks per GB. Provider B offers 25 GB for $100, so that's 4 bucks a GB. Then I checked Provider C with their 50 GB plan at $180, coming in at 3.60 per GB. Clearly, the bigger the plan, the lower the cost per GB, but not all providers are equally fast or reliable. Speed tests? Provider A hits an average of 150 ms ping, decent but not stellar, while Provider B's proxies are closer to 120 ms. Provider C? Around 100 ms, so it's slightly snappier. I ran a few scraping sessions with each, and while Provider C's speed gave me a slight edge, the real difference was in how stable their IPs felt, less bans, less time wasted., if you're scaling up and need bulk, going for the 50+ GB plans with lower per GB costs makes sense, but if speed and stability matter more, the extra few bucks might be worth it. ymmv, but this breakdown gives a decent baseline for making smarter choices without just throwing money at the wall.
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So I threw together a quick proxy rotation script with Python, expecting some magic. Turns out the $10/month residential proxies I got are barely better than free datacenter ones for scraping. The real kicker? After a few hours, my IPs get blacklisted faster than I can blink. Cost me 50 bucks for a week of run time and still got ghosted by the target site. Moral? If you're chasing quality, be ready to pay big or settle for being detected and blocked faster than your script can refresh. Don't say I didn't warn you when your 'cheap' setup burns out in 2 days.
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Data point: I break down proxy speeds by running identical tests across different providers and proxies types. Measuring latency, download, upload, jitter, and packet loss. I log times over multiple runs, record geo-specific results, and compare data points. Looking for fresh suggestions or better ways to get real-world numbers that actually matter not just speed test numbers in ideal labs. Who's got a method that filters out fake promises and shows what proxies really deliver in the wild?
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so, i've been staring at this pricing page for another 'premium residential rotating' proxy service. $30 per gb. lmao. takes me right back to 2020 when you could buy a whole datacenter subnet from some guy on skype for fifty bucks and it just worked. now everything is an api call that sometimes changes the ip. my scraper thinks it's getting new ips but the target site just sees the same geolocation stuck in kansas city for three hours straight. quality now means they ban you slowly, not never. i miss buying physical servers in random dc's and setting up squid myself. yeah it was janky but you knew exactly where your traffic came from. if it died, you ssh'd in and rebooted it. now i have to open a ticket and wait 3 days because my usage pattern looks 'automated' to their automated system for selling automation tools.
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Just messing around with different proxy combos to beat anti-detection stuff lately. Everyone's talking about fingerprinting tricks but nobody really shares what actually works. Tested a few residentials from Proxy Elite and some datacenter options from LimeProxies. Speeds are decent but the key is stability and how well they hide your real fingerprint. Proxy Elite's residentials seem to perform well on speed tests, averaging around 150ms with consistent ping, but their anti-detection game is really about the combo. I paired them with a rotating user-agent and canvas fingerprint changer, and honestly it helped a lot. Datacenter proxies? Speed is faster, like 80ms max, but they get flagged way easier if sites run heavy fingerprinting. Mobile proxies from AP proxies are a wild card, some slow but less detectable, especially if you use a good rotation and masking. The trick is layering mixing residential and mobile with good proxy rotation and fingerprint spoofing. SHOW ME THE DATA, I ran speed tests across a dozen providers and the combo that wins for me right now is Proxy Elite residentials with a rotating UA, and a VPN service on top for added layer. Anyone else tried layering proxies for anti-fingerprinting? Would love to hear your setups or results, especially if you've cracked the detection code.
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Quick hot take: testing proxy speed is like trying to find the fastest tortoise in a race where everyone keeps changing lanes. So I set up a test where I pinged the hell out of a bunch of proxies - residential, datacenter, mobile - from a handful of providers I actually care about. Used a simple script, kept it running for a few hours, and recorded latency and throughput. The goal? Get real data, not just the vendors' marketing spew. Now here's where it gets interesting - some providers with shiny promises of 'lightning fast' proxies turned out to be slow as molasses, and others with a reputation for reliability were rock solid. So I ask, what's your go-to methodology? Are you just eyeballing the ping times or doing full-blown throughput tests with real scraper loads? Because I'm convinced most of y'all just slap a timer on a curl and call it a day. If anyone's found a cleaner way that actually resembles real-world use, spill it. There's a deal I found with a provider offering a speed testing discount for bulk testing - good or just another trap? Looking to optimize w/o breaking the bank or my brain. Let me know your methods, because honestly I think this is the step most ignore but could make or break your campaign's backbone.
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Alright so I've been playing around with geo-targeted residential proxies, trying to get my localized content game tighter. Found a couple providers that promise city-level targeting, but man the speed is hit or miss. Ran some quick tests, got providers claiming 50ms but hitting 150ms for certain cities. One provider's speeds in LA and NY are solid at around 60ms but Chicago hits 180ms. Not ideal for scraping or ad testing but good enough for small scale stuff. Keep in mind, if you need that hyper-local, you gotta test each provider and city combo yourself, speeds matter for CTR and SOI. No point wasting budget on sluggish proxies, even if they are geo-specific. Just sharing my latest data dump, hope it helps someone avoid the trash.
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Yo, so I been using static residential proxies for a while now, mainly for sneaky stuff like sneaker drops, ticket scalping, and some legit ad verification. They just work better for long-term setups, no rotation needed, and sites can't flag me as easy as with rotating ones. I got a hookup recently from this provider that's got a 30% discount if you buy in bulk, like 10k+ proxies, which is sick. Their residential proxies are legit, no IP bans after weeks of use, and they got a pretty big pool, so I can target specific areas or avoid geo restrictions without worrying about random blocks. Tbh, if you wanna go all-in on high-volume tasks that need stable IPs, static residential is the move. Oh, and their prices are pretty fair atm, I've seen some deals online but this one's actually legit and not some scam. Just don't go cheap, that's how you get caught. Hit me up if you want the provider, I got the link saved.
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So I thought I was clever, cheap datacenter proxies, right? Spent like 50 bucks on a new pool, tested them for scraping some high-CR sites, and boom, IP blocks. Why am I not surprised. Garbage in, garbage out. They look solid, but detectability is a real pain, especially when you're pushing limits. Tried changing headers, timing, even randomizing user-agents. Still got caught. It's like they're watching me through a window. Do these proxies even work anymore or is it just a myth? I don't get why providers still push these cheap datacenter proxies as if they're invisible. They're detectable as hell if you go too hard. Anyone got a trick to stay under the radar, or is it just a lost cause? Honestly, I'm thinking of going back to residentials or mobile but man, the price is crazy. Just wanna scrape without a headache but seems impossible lately. Guess I need better rotation, smarter footprints, or just accept I'm wasting money. Cheers to another failed campaign, probably lose a bunch more CR cause of these. Ugh.
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Alright so I'm knee deep trying to figure out how to test proxy speeds without losing my mind and honestly it's like chasing shadows. First I set up a basic script, think Python or whatever, run it against a bunch of proxies, but wait, what exactly am I measuring? Is it latency, bandwidth, or just the ping? Then you gotta think about server location, server load, time of day, probably moon phase too, because why not. I've tried different tools but most of them are like a blind guy feeling an elephant, you get different results every time and swear you're in the twilight zone. Oh and don't forget about the variability in network traffic, which makes your precious speed test look like a bad joke. Honestly, I feel like I need a PhD in quantum physics just to understand what "proxy speed" really means anymore. If anyone has a legit way to benchmark proxies without pulling your hair out, I'm all ears or just confused silence, whatever works.
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Guys I just hit the jackpot. Testing proxies all day long and bam, found a provider that actually works like a charm. No more drops, no more leaks, just solid IPs that stick. Used them with my favorite scraping tool, super smooth, no detection, CR up 30%. I know, I know, I was skeptical too but this is different. Fast, reliable, affordable. You guys gotta check this out. I'll drop the link soon but trust me, it's worth it. This could be the for 2025. Been through BrightData, Smartproxy, Oxylabs, all hype. But this? Pure magic. GG, finally. Cheers to finally cracking the residential code.
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Alright so I'm trying to automate some account creation for a new push traffic source and I'm stuck between using a proxy API service or just buying a static residential list the API route is supposed to be easier but every time I plug it into my script the accounts get flagged immediately and I swear the IP rotation is too fast show me the numbers they claim millions of IPs but my CR is zero on the first verification step meanwhile with my own curated list from a couple providers I get like a 30% success rate but managing that list manually is killing my time especially when IPs die overnight and I have to swap them out manually feeling like APIs are overhyped for this use case unless you're doing mass scraping not delicate account setup anyone else run into this brick wall specifically for creating accounts not just browsing
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look, i just watched a solid local service offer bleed cash for two weeks because my geo-proxied scrapes were off. targeting three cities, using a residential proxy service that promised 'precise location'. built the content, ran the ads, ctr was garbage. finally checked the actual ip locations and half the proxies were popping in neighboring states. lmao, no wonder the localization felt wrong. so i'm asking the room, who's actually getting reliable geo-targeted proxies for localized content? i need something that actually respects the city-level targeting, not just the country. and if you aren't tracking every link placement with your own custom spreadsheet, you're just guessing, but with proxies i'm realizing i need to track the damn ip locations too. what providers are you using that don't lie about their geo-data?
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so been testing different proxies for sm automation, but nothing sticks long enough to keep me going. tried a few residential providers, speeds are okay but auth keeps dropping or getting flagged, even with fresh IPs. datacenter proxies? too easy to detect, keeps killing my accounts. mobile proxies seem promising but some are so slow and unstable. anyone got recent solid reviews or some fresh suggestions? really tired of wasting time on flaky providers that promise the world but deliver garbage. test it yourself but right now im stuck and need a real workaround.
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right. So lets break this down like a bloody lab experiment. You want proxies that dont make your wallet cry and actually work. BrightData, Smartproxy, Oxylabs - they all claim to be kings of the hill but when you strip away the fancy marketing and shiny dashboards its a war zone of price versus quality. BrightData is like the premium steak, costs a fortune but man it better deliver. Their residential proxies are reliable, fast, but the EPC is brutal. Good for high-end scraping and anti-detection but if youre scraping the same site 24/7 you'll bleed out. Smartproxy? Its like the budget burger. Cheap enough, decent quality but dont expect it to win any races or dodge anti-bot measures like a ninja. Their residential pool is huge but speed and uptime can be inconsistent. If you just need a cheap pool for less sensitive stuff, they're okay. Oxylabs? They're the fancy foie gras of the bunch. Pricey as hell, but the quality is pretty damn solid. They have a network, good speed, and reliable uptime. But if you're on a shoestring budget, it's a no-go. Honestly, it all boils down to what you need. If you want top-tier, pay the premium. If youre just testing or doing some light scraping, smartproxy might do. But dont expect miracles from the cheapies. The brutal truth is the price you pay is usually what you get. This game is about balancing your budget with your needs. No one proxy provider is perfect, and everyone is selling a little bit of snake oil. So do your homework, run your tests, and stop chasing the holy grail of perfect proxies.
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Yo, I need some solid proxy suggestions like yesterday. Doing ad verification at scale and I keep hitting detection walls. Residential or mobile, I don't care just give me some names that actually work without blowing my budget. Tired of flaky providers that kill my ROI and slow me down. If you got tested some good ones lately, drop the names now I got no time to waste.
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Been running the same static resi IPs for 6 months from a "reputable" provider for account management. Needed that consistent fingerprint for FB BM access. Woke up this morning to half my IPs dead, no bounce, just timeout. Support ticket's been open 8 hours, radio silence. Thing is, my contract says guaranteed uptime and 48 hour replacement notification. Use case is totally blown now because you can't just swap a static IP on a warmed-up ad account without triggering reviews. This is exactly why I always warned about the low-tier providers but I paid for the premium tier here. So much for that. Anyone else get burned by sudden IP rotations lately or have a provider that actually communicates before they nuke your setup?
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Alright so you want to set up proxy rotation with Python let's talk about how clownish the modern ecosystem has become compared to what we used to do I'm looking at these scripts now and they're all about handling API calls from BrightData or IPRoyal or whatever managing sessions handling ban detection retrying with exponential backoff it's a whole framework just to fetch some HTML remember when you could just throw a list of proxies from hidemyass into a requests session with a for loop and call it a day yeah those proxies were garbage but they were simple garbage the problem now is that everything is an API endpoint and you're not really rotating IPs you're rotating tokens that point to IPs and half the time the IP you get is already burned because someone else on the pool just scraped the same target ten seconds ago so your fancy rotation logic is pointless I'm nostalgic for the brute force era where you'd just hammer a site with different IPs until one worked and you accepted the bans as part of the process now it's all about stealth and fingerprinting and emulating human behavior which means your rotator needs to handle headers cookie persistence TLS fingerprinting maybe even browser profile rotation it's not a proxy rotator anymore it's an entire anti-detection suite wrapped in 300 lines of Python my advice start simple use requests or selenium if you need browser control build a class that takes a list of proxy endpoints from your provider implement a basic round-robin or random selection but put all your energy into the error handling because that's where the real game is watch for specific HTTP codes or response texts that signal a ban then have your rotator not just switch IP but also chill for a bit maybe change your user agent pattern because if you just instantly retry with another IP from the same pool they'll see the pattern and nail you again it's not that simple my friend everyone focuses on the rotation algorithm but the magic is in the cooldown and pattern breakage honestly thinking about writing this guide makes me want to go back to using curl on a VPS with a dozen SSH tunnels life was easier when we had less tools
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man I'm losing it here. Just wanna get straight to the point. Everyone's arguing about SOCKS5 and HTTP proxies but it's like they're speaking different languages. I just need a quick yes or no. Price wise SOCKS5 is usually more expensive but supposedly more flexible, right? But then HTTP proxies are cheaper and supposedly easier to set up, but how's the quality? When do I actually pick SOCKS5 over HTTP? Is it only if I'm doing something like p2p or complex stuff or can I use HTTP for pretty much everything if I don't care about super stealth? Honestly I don't wanna waste my money on SOCKS5 if I don't need it but also don't wanna get caught or slow down my scraping. I'm in a rush to get this done. Someone just give me the quick breakdown, I don't care about the fancy explanations anymore. Just tell me what works for what and when I should spend extra. Thanks.
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