Comment by OptionOfT

16 hours ago

You should check your websites like grass dot io (I refuse to give them traffic).

They pay you for your bandwidth while they resell it to 3rd parties, which is why a lot of bot traffic looks like it comes from residential IPs.

Yes, but the point is that big company crawlers aren’t paying for questionably sourced residential proxies.

If this person is seeing a lot of traffic from residential IPs then I would be shocked if it’s really Amazon. I think someone else is doing something sketchy and they put “AmazonBot” in the user agent to make victims think it’s Amazon.

You can set the user agent string to anything you want, as we all know.

  • I used to work for malware detection for a security company, and we looked at residential IP proxy services.

    They are very, very, very expensive for the amount of data you get. You are paying for per bit of data. Even with Amazon's money, the number quickly become untenable.

    It was literally cheaper for us to subscribe to business ADSL/cable/fiber optic services to our corp office buildings and thrunk them together.

  • I worked for Microsoft doing malware detection back 10+ years ago, and questionably sourced proxies were well and truly on the table

    • >> but the point is that big company crawlers aren’t paying for questionably sourced residential proxies.

      > I worked for Microsoft doing malware detection back 10+ years ago, and questionably sourced proxies were well and truly on the table

      Big Company Crawlers using questionably sourced proxies - this seems striking. What can you share about it?

      2 replies →

  • They could be using echo devices to proxy their traffic…

    Although I’m not necessarily gonna make that accusation, because it would be pretty serious misconduct if it were true.

    • To add: it’s also kinda silly on the surface of it for Amazon to use consumer devices to hide their crawling traffic, but still leave “Amazonbot” in their UA string… it’s pretty safe to assume they’re not doing this.

  • > Yes, but the point is that big company crawlers aren’t paying for questionably sourced residential proxies

    You'd be surprised...

    • >> Yes, but the point is that big company crawlers aren’t paying for questionably sourced residential proxies

      > You'd be surprised...

      Surprised by what? What do you know?

Wild. While I'm sure the service is technically legal since it can be used for non-nefarious purposes, signing up for a service like that seems like a guarantee that you are contributing to problematic behavior.