IPv4 vs IPv6 proxies - what's the real deal?

IPv4 vs IPv6 proxies - what's the real deal?

Driftwood

New member
been reading up on proxies and got stuck on this IPv4 vs IPv6 thing. Like, do I really need to care about which one I get for my affiliate stuff? I mean I just want to scrape some data and do some ad verification without getting banned. Heard IPv4 is kinda old school now but IPv6 supposed to be newer and more plentiful? But then I read somewhere that most sites still mainly handle IPv4 for blocking and detection. So does that mean if I get an IPv6 proxy I'm just wasting my money? Or is there some kinda advantage I'm missing? Also, how does this play with residential or datacenter proxies? Do they both support IPv6? Or should I just stick with IPv4 cause it's safer or more compatible? Anyway, trying to get my head around it before I buy some proxies for scraping and testing. Anyone actually tested this or got some insight? Would be nice to know if I should invest in IPv6 proxies or not.
 
you right bruh, IPv6 is more plentiful but most sites still mainly handle IPv4 for blocking and detection, so for scraping and ad verification, IPv4 proxies are still safer and more compatible afaik. using IPv
 
If you're just scraping data and doing ad verification, don't sleep on IPv6. Some sites might still mainly check IPv4, but many are moving to detect IPv6 too. If you get residential IPv6 proxies, they can be pretty stealthy and more future-proof. Just make sure your tools support IPv6 so you don't run into compatibility issues.
 
just my 2 cents: yeah, IPv6 seems cool but I'd still go with IPv4 for now, most sites still play it safe with IPv4 detection. But if you testing or scraping on newer sites, maybe try IPv6 too, see if it gets less attention. do residential IPv6
 
from my own testing, stick with IPv4 for now unless you got a specific reason to go IPv6. I once bought a batch of IPv6 residentials for a project, thought I was ahead of the curve but most sites still flagged me hard. wasted my money.
 
Yeah, I learned that the hard way too. bought some IPv6 residentials early on thinking they'd be gold, but most sites still just pinged them out. best tip is to test on the specific sites you care about before dumping big money into them
 
Thanks for the insights, guys. Yeah, I figured IPv4 is safer for now but maybe worth testing IPv6 on newer sites. Gotta admit, I'm still kinda confused about residential vs datacenter with IPv6, any quick take?
 
last month i was testing both for a client. found IPv6 proxies to be more stable and faster in some regions but they also caused some issues with certain websites that still struggle with IPv6. my tip - don't just chase the new tech, always check compatibility with your target sites first.
 
last month i was testing both for a niche site. found ipv6 proxies to be faster in some regions but had issues with sites that still prefer ipv4. my tip is to always test both and keep a close eye on which ones get blocked or slow down.
 
tbh yeah i noticed that too, some sites still just prefer IPv4 and give probs with IPv6. if ur testing, maybe try out proxy services like Bright Data, they got both options and can switch easily. sometimes u gotta switch between both to see what works fr that site.
 
Different angle: are we really sure IPv6 proxies are better just cuz they're newer? I mean, I've seen some that are just as flaky and problematic as old IPv4 ones. Maybe the real deal is just about how well the provider manages their IP pools and routing, not the protocol version.
 
IPv4 vs IPv6 proxies - what's the real deal? Do you think the future is fully IPv6 or we still gotta stick with IPv4 for a while?
 
if you're testing, try running some numbers, like 10k requests. I found IPv6 proxies often lag behind in stability - like 30% of my IPv6 proxies had issues with connection drops or slow speeds, compared to about 10% for IPv4. So rn, I wouldn't say IPv6 is totally ready for prime time, especially for heavy testing.
 
tbh do you guys think IPv6 proxies will really replace IPv4 anytime soon or is it still gonna be a mixed bag?
 
been doing this 3 years and honestly, ipv4 is still king for stability and speed, especially for high volume stuff. ipv6 is the future no doubt but right now it's a mixed bag with a lot of providers still working out the kinks. think
 
Are you thinking about switching or just testing? I agree, ipv4 still beats in stability and speed, especially for high volume. I'd say if you're doing stuff that needs reliability, stick to ipv4 for now, but keep an eye on ipv6 developments.
 
I've been messing around with proxies for like 5 years now and I remember when IPv4 was the only game in town. Switched to IPv6 a few months ago and honestly I was hyped but ended up hitting more issues than I thought. Some providers still have flaky support, so I stick to IPv4 mostly for now. It's weird how ppl act like IPv6 is just perfect when it's still kinda half-baked in real world
 
i think ppl sleep on ipv6 for some reason. like, 60% of new devices now use ipv6 by default but still ppl stuck on ipv4, which is weird. anyone got real data on rev differences?
 
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