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Let's just get real here, trying to beat anti-fingerprinting is like trying to outsmart a guy with a PhD in deception. The internet is smarter now, way more aware of your cookie tweaks and user-agent swaps. So the question I keep spinning around in my head is, how do I layer proxies in a way that actually makes me invisible or at least really hard to track? First, you gotta think about the combo, residential, datacenter, mobile proxies. Each has its role but mixing them right might be the key. Residential proxies are best for blending in, they look legit, like real humans but they're slow and expensive. Datacenter proxies are fast but flagged easy, so you can't just slap them in everywhere. Mobile proxies are tricky, but they mimic real mobile users, which helps a ton for anti-fingerprint. But how do you connect the dots? Do you chain them or rotate them? Do you run a pool of residential and swap in datacenter to throw off fingerprint scripts? And then there's the setup do you use a proxy manager that supports session persistence? Or do you keep changing IPs constantly? Every move impacts your fingerprint. Some people swear by browser fingerprint randomizers, but that's just another layer of complexity. You need to simulate real human behavior too, mouse movement, scroll speed, the works. But that's a whole other mess. Honestly, I'm just trying to understand if anyone's cracked the code on combining proxies for anti-detection without blowing up your budget or your speed. It's like trying to hit a moving target with a blindfold.