Proxy for ticket scalping, speed test inside

Proxy for ticket scalping, speed test inside

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been trying to find a proxy that can keep up for ticket scalping, most are trash after a week. Got a new residential provider, tested speeds, and they're actually decent - around 50-70ms, stable IPs. But honestly, blacklist kills more than bad speed. Anyone got recent wins or just sticking to old reliable? Need quick answers before my next race.
 
Need quick answers before my next race
sounds like you need a proxy that's not just fast but also resilient to blacklists, which is rare these days. quick answers? honestly, good luck finding one that sticks around longer than a week. maybe try rotating IPs fast enough or using fresh residentials right before the race, but it's always a gamble. better stock up on some backup proxies just in case the first one flakes.
 
You're chasing a unicorn here. Speed is one thing but blacklists are a whole other monster. The ones that last longer are usually more expensive and more resilient but no guarantees. Show me the data if you got recent wins. Otherwise, this is just guessing in the dark.
 
i call bullshit on the idea that blacklists are the real problem here. most of the time its bad proxies or the same crappy providers reusing their IPs. quality control and rotation matter way more than just speed or blacklists.
 
Honestly, I think most of these guys are overestimating how much blacklists are the real enemy. Yeah they suck but if u rotate proxies smartly and avoid reusing IPs across multiple platforms, blacklists become just a speed bump. The real killer is low-quality providers that give u the same recycled IPs, not the blacklist itself. Speed and IP hygiene are key. Blacklist fears are often a smoke screen for lazy sourcing. Gl with that.
 
Here's the thing though, have you considered that maybe blacklists aren't just a side effect but the main gatekeeper in this game? I mean, if blacklists are so easy to dodge with smarter rotation, why do so many still get caught? Could it be that the real vulnerability isn't the IPs but the way the proxies are handled on the backend? Because honestly, if blacklists are the ultimate barrier, isn't it smarter to focus your energy on building proxies that blend in rather than just trying to get faster or more stable? I've seen some of the best speed tests turn into paper tigers when the blacklists come into play. So, are we just chasing shiny speeds or are we really trying to crack the code on blacklist resilience?
 
Anyone got recent wins or just sticking to old rel
Honestly, it's a bit of both. Some old reliables still hold up but they tend to get blacklisted faster, and newer ones sometimes perform better but are a gamble. The game's always been about that balancing act - speed, rotation, avoiding detection. I've had some wins recently with a mix of fresh residentials and rotating proxies that look like legit users, but it's never a guarantee. Just gotta keep testing and hope the whales don't turn the creak into a bannhammer.
 
quality control and rotation matter way more than just speed or blacklists
yeah, I gotta disagree a bit. quality control and rotation do matter, but speed is still king in ticket scalping. if your proxies are slow or unstable, you lose races before you even start. blacklists are annoying but not the end of the world if u got quick rotation and fresh IPs. it's not just about avoiding blacklists, it's about keeping your process fast and smooth.
 
look, trust me I was a pharmacist so I've seen a lot of hype around proxies and blacklists. honestly most of it's just smoke and mirrors. if speed was all that mattered, everyone would be winning but in reality blacklists are the real gatekeepers. good proxies and smart rotation are necessary but not enough if your IPs get flagged constantly. been there done that. the trick is not just getting decent speeds but making your IPs look legit, avoiding patterns and constantly cycling fresh ones. blacklists aren't just a hassle, they're a test of how sneaky you can be. if you rely only on old reliable proxies, they'll catch you sooner or later. my advice? diversify your IP pool, be quick about rotating, and don't get lazy on the footprint. because fr, speed without stealth is like running with a target on your back. based on what I've seen, if you're serious about winning, focus on stealth first, speed second.
 
okay, so blacklists are the real enemy here, not just slow proxies. source: i broke it myself trying to dodge blacklists with fancy rotation and speed. fast proxies help but if they get cooked quickly, you're back to square one. keep chasing that perfect stack but don't forget the blacklist game is always evolving. had my fair share of wins just by refreshing IP pools faster than they can cook, but man, it's a constant grind.
 
Need quick answers before my next race
Look, it all comes down to trust in the back end, not just the proxy. You want quick answers? You gotta have a system that handles the blacklists, rotates smart, and keeps the speed stable enough to not get you flagged in the first place. Speed is just a fraction of the puzzle, but everyone chasing it blindly forgets the moat. The real winners build a moat around thier process, not just chase the fastest proxy for a race. If your proxies are good but the blacklists are a nightmare, all the speed in the world doesn't matter. Remember, in this game, the blacklists are the real gatekeepers, not the milliseconds.
 
Speed helps but blacklists are the real pain. You can have a lightning fast proxy but if it gets cooked quick or flagged, you're dead in the water. Rotation and trust in the system matter more than just raw speed. Correlation is not causation but if your blacklists are winning, no amount of speed can save you.
 
been trying to find a proxy that can keep up for ticket scalping, most are trash after a week. Got a new residential provider, tested speeds, and they're actually decent - around 50-70ms, stable IPs.
Oh man, sounds like you're chasing the holy grail of proxies for ticket scalping, huh? 50-70ms stable IPs sound decent on paper but if most proxies turn to dust after a week, you know the game better than most. Trust me I've been burned a lot trying to keep up with the blacklists and the static IPs only last so long before they get cooked or flagged. Speed is just one piece of the puzzle you gotta have a system that rotates smartly, keeps your back end clean, and never relies on a single provider for too long or you end up with a burned stack faster than you can say scalper's remorse. Good luck in your race, hope your new provider keeps up longer than the last one.
 
Whet, I agree blacklists are a pain but not the main issue. I've had fresh IPs die faster than old ones just from lazy rotation or garbage pools. The real trick is a solid whitelist and good rotation - speed alone doesn't cut it anymore.
 
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