One major aspect you're not mentioning is hardware and device fingerprinting. This by itself can keep you blacklisted even changing software/browser fingerprints and IP. On mobile and PC websites can see most of your hardware like CPU, motherboard, ram, HDD's/SSD's, graphics, screen size, etc. All of that data is used to generate a unique hardware ID that will remain visible even when proxy and browser fingerprinting is in use. There is a way to "spoof" the hardware ID, but then you also have multiple advertising ID's and Device ID's all unique to your device. I just use burner devices and rotate to new ones when needed. Usually a device lasts 1.5 to 2 months before blacklisting for me. And I don't do that because I want to. Tech is just too advanced and privacy is completely gone, so in a lot of cases that's the only option. There's too many identifiers and you can't mask them all. Maybe for lower security sites you can get away with certain things, but most major sites you can't.
So when one is traveling and VPNs back to their home network thus having the home residential IP address, websites and streaming services will still know one is traveling based on geolocation, timezone and other trackers. Correct?
I was using a reliable datacenter proxy to login to my crypto accounts for years, but recently their locations became inaccurate, straight up risky to use! My question is if I use residential proxy which rotates quite often, would the crypto sites become suspicious? They usually like to assign one IP to your identity.
So much information!!
This guy needs more viewers
I never thought about using proxies to protect my alternate accounts. Great advice as always!
One major aspect you're not mentioning is hardware and device fingerprinting. This by itself can keep you blacklisted even changing software/browser fingerprints and IP. On mobile and PC websites can see most of your hardware like CPU, motherboard, ram, HDD's/SSD's, graphics, screen size, etc. All of that data is used to generate a unique hardware ID that will remain visible even when proxy and browser fingerprinting is in use. There is a way to "spoof" the hardware ID, but then you also have multiple advertising ID's and Device ID's all unique to your device.
I just use burner devices and rotate to new ones when needed. Usually a device lasts 1.5 to 2 months before blacklisting for me. And I don't do that because I want to. Tech is just too advanced and privacy is completely gone, so in a lot of cases that's the only option. There's too many identifiers and you can't mask them all. Maybe for lower security sites you can get away with certain things, but most major sites you can't.
I know, you posted this a year ago, but like, if a virtual machine was used as well, then there would really be no way of being blacklisted, right?
@@enlyxtyrill6127 There are identifiers that will show you're using a VM. That in itself immediately raises flags on sites' security systems
Wow
My left ear got all the info but my right ear was too busy listening to the effects
I regret reading this 😅
So when one is traveling and VPNs back to their home network thus having the home residential IP address, websites and streaming services will still know one is traveling based on geolocation, timezone and other trackers. Correct?
I have learned something today broo thanks for sharing I’m a beginner and I wanna learn more ❤
I was using a reliable datacenter proxy to login to my crypto accounts for years, but recently their locations became inaccurate, straight up risky to use! My question is if I use residential proxy which rotates quite often, would the crypto sites become suspicious? They usually like to assign one IP to your identity.
I love you sir you made my day I learn alot...
Is it possible for Google to track a Residential RDP or Private RDP (fresh RDP, new user account details as per IP location)?
where is the video that explain how to use my phone to get mobile proxy
ruclips.net/video/QfKAY-nFsN4/видео.html
@@Multilogin hey great video, i have a question pls so let's say i bought a mobile ip proxy, can i use it in my pc ? Or is it dangerous
@@Ahmed_Ayoubier a bit of a late response but yes you can
Keren