Please share good proxy sources/suppliers



https://squidproxies.com/ has been a main supplier for awhile. I've only used the private so can't say about their shared. They have been as good as any in both price and replacement when someone screws up an entire subnet and G pages will no longer load.

There use to be a 30% discount code floating around. Not sure if they still honor for new subscribers or not.
 
https://squidproxies.com/ has been a main supplier for awhile. I've only used the private so can't say about their shared. They have been as good as any in both price and replacement when someone screws up an entire subnet and G pages will no longer load.

There use to be a 30% discount code floating around. Not sure if they still honor for new subscribers or not.

I've heard a few bad things about Squid from clients, never used them myself, just an observation from client convos.
 
I've heard a few bad things about Squid from clients, never used them myself, just an observation from client convos.

squidproxies.com or the software squid? i find it's easy to leak your real IP with squid software. the default config adds an x-forwarded-for header and if you're using your browser, flash can ignore it.

i use OpenVPN on random VPS installs i have from small hosting companies. i find all public proxies, paid or otherwise, are already flagged for what i need them for.
 
Another vote for MyPrivateProxy and SquidProxies. I've used both and had no complaints. If I had to pick one, I'd go with MPP.
 
squidproxies.com or the software squid? i find it's easy to leak your real IP with squid software. the default config adds an x-forwarded-for header and if you're using your browser, flash can ignore it.

i use OpenVPN on random VPS installs i have from small hosting companies. i find all public proxies, paid or otherwise, are already flagged for what i need them for.

squidproxies.com I have been told. I always just stick with MPP and never have an issue.
 
I've heard a few bad things about Squid from clients, never used them myself, just an observation from client convos.

Wouldn't mind hearing what the particular complaint was. If I had to be picky it would be that if a set goes down with Googles API's on the weekend it might be 24-36+ hours before replacement. Because of this I have to carry excess inventory which drives up my costs. Others suppliers was about the same or worse though.
 
How do you guys test your proxies for elite / anonymity? I just have a little script that runs it thru 3 online proxy checkers and it verifies the proper page element equals the same IP. It has to pass this before it is assigned to a profile that logs into websites.
 
How do you guys test your proxies for elite / anonymity? I just have a little script that runs it thru 3 online proxy checkers and it verifies the proper page element equals the same IP. It has to pass this before it is assigned to a profile that logs into websites.

All private proxies are "elite"... At least from any provider I've used.
 
All private proxies are "elite"... At least from any provider I've used.

Private, elite, high anonymous, etc. terms wasn't meant to be the point. I was wondering if anyone uses a particular method to make sure the origin IP isn't bleeding through.

Does everyone just take for granted the Proxies are always masking the origin IP? Or is there a more intense, better method than the one described above that I use?

Or is it the case with private proxies if they fail so does the connection and it should never leak the upstream IP?

But that would not explain . . .

. . . i find it's easy to leak your real IP with squid software. the default config adds an x-forwarded-for header . . .

For all I know the proxies I'm buying are being created by the squidproxy software.
 
Private, elite, high anonymous, etc. terms wasn't meant to be the point. I was wondering if anyone uses a particular method to make sure the origin IP isn't bleeding through.

Does everyone just take for granted the Proxies are always masking the origin IP? Or is there a more intense, better method than the one described above that I use?

Or is it the case with private proxies if they fail so does the connection and it should never leak the upstream IP?

But that would not explain . . .



For all I know the proxies I'm buying are being created by the squidproxy software.

Never had a problem with a private proxy provider leaking my IP, but I'd hit here and see the headers leaked if you're suspicious. http://httpbin.org/headers