Comment by lxgr
18 hours ago
> VPNs can fight traffic analysis, they can't fight preemptive IPv4 blocking.
How do you think VPNs are getting past VOD providers’ VPN block lists?
> Residential IPv4 VPNs are not legal offerings and their use is limited.
What’s illegal about them? And does it matter to uncooperative/aggressive bots?
> How do you think VPNs are getting past VOD providers’ VPN block lists?
In my experience, they most often don't. If you got more insights, please enlighten me. I presume VPNs which get past VPN block lists, are just not yet on the radar, or don't provide the privacy claimed, not actually fully in control of their infrastructure.
> What’s illegal about them?
Where do you think residential IPs are coming from? It's often botnets or otherwise compromised devices, or people tricked into sharing their connection. In any case, it's most certainly breaking the ISP's TOS. Because of the effort behind providing residential IPs, these VPN services are rather expensive. And certainly not trustworthy in regard to privacy. If offering residential IPs would be legal, every VPN service would provide them.
> And does it matter to uncooperative/aggressive bots?
No. They are used for mostly shady/criminal activity, where the limitations and legality don't matter. I doubt commercial LLM crawlers and data intense campaigns aren't bothered by legality, stability, connectivity or (upload) bandwidth limitations. Like, you wouldn't crawl the web on a mobile connection.