Here's the thing with static residential proxies. People get hyped up because they're perceived as more legit or less bannable, but in reality they're just another tool that can be useful if you don't screw it up. Integrating them with GSA or Scrapebox? Yeah, you can, but only if your approach is tight. Just slapping them in and hoping your workflow doesn't blow through your budget isn't a strategy. You gotta know your rotation, your pre-landing logic, and have a way to mask the traffic properly. Otherwise, it's like pouring premium gas into a car with no engine. Sure, the potential's there, but if your fundamentals are weak, it's just wasted gas. Most folks forget that proxies are just the paint on the car. If your LPs and keywords are garbage, or your angles are off, no amount of proxy sophistication will save you. I've seen plenty burn through a stack of cheap static residentials only to get flagged faster than you can say 'banhammer'. The secret sauce is to make sure your setups are incremental, keep your footprints small, and actually work on your pre-landers. Because, proxies won't save a trash campaign, they just mask the smell. Keep your basics solid, test with smaller batches, and don't overcomplicate. Less is more when you're just starting to integrate something new.