Static residential proxies are only as good as your management. thinking they'll work long-term without rotation or at least some variation is naive. most of the time u end up flagged quick if u don't keep changing IPs or make it look natural.
bruh, I think they can be legit if you do your homework. last year I scored a decent deal on a VPN that I've been using for months now. but yeah, sometimes the deals are just hype so ya gotta compare prices before pulling the trigger.
Been doing this 3 years now and I gotta say I disagree a bit. Manual removal takes forever and sometimes just ain't possible, especially if the webmaster ignores you or the link is from a low quality site. How do you weigh the effort of manual removal versus just disavowing? Do you have a...
Spot on, but I gotta say my experience is different. I've seen some cheap links crush it if you vet the seller right and know the niche. Price isn't everything, quality varies even at higher tiers depending on how they build it.
careful with just relying on the "spammy links piling up" rule. Sometimes a few suspicious links can still hurt your site if they're on high authority pages or seem unnatural. My tip is to always check the link context, not just quantity, before disavowing.
ok so careful with just chasing the cheapest proxies, that usually backfires. Have u tried Oxylabs or BrightData? They cost more but are waaay less likely to get flagged or blocked if u know how to use em right
Ever considered how a single slip-up with black hat tactics can ruin all your legit work? Do you really think that pattern you found won't eventually get flagged or penalized? I'd ask, how many legit white hat links did your competitors build versus your "sus" ones?
different angle: maybe neither wins outright, it depends on the niche and traffic quality, I've seen rev share work better in some cases where the lifetime value is high and CPA is too volatile or low.