Saturday, June 23, 2012

Proxy Servers (24.06.12)

Proxy Servers (3500)

Live Http Proxy Servers (L1/L2/L3) checked with Scrapebox Proxy Checker...

Friday, June 22, 2012

Proxy Servers (23.06.12)

Proxy Servers (3500)

Live Http Proxy Servers (L1/L2/L3) checked with Scrapebox Proxy Checker...

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Proxy Servers (22.06.12)

Proxy Servers (3600)

Live Http Proxy Servers (L1/L2/L3) checked with Scrapebox Proxy Checker...

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Proxy Servers (21.06.12)

Proxy Servers (3500)

Live Http Proxy Servers (L1/L2/L3) checked with Scrapebox Proxy Checker...

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Proxy Instructions And Notes

Proxy Instructions And Notes

 

Web browser instructions

  • Mozilla Firefox: Tools > Options > Advanced > Settings > Manual proxy configuration.
  • Google Chrome: Options > Under the hood > Network > Change proxy settings > LAN settings > Use a proxy server > Advanced > HTTP.
  • Internet Explorer: Tools > Internet options > Connections > LAN settings > Use a proxy server > Advanced > HTTP.
  • Opera: Tools > Preferences > Advanced > Network.

Anonymity levels

  • Level 1: No anonymity; remote host knows your IP and knows you are using proxy.
  • Level 4: Low anonymity; remote host does not know your IP, but it knows you are using proxy.
  • Level 8: Medium anonymity; remote host knows you are using proxy, and thinks it knows your IP, but this is not yours (this is usually a multihomed proxy which shows its inbound interface as REMOTE_ADDR for a target host).
  • Level 16: High anonymity; remote host does not know your IP and has no direct proof of proxy usage (proxy-connection family header strings). If such hosts do not send additional header strings it may be considered as high-anonymous. If a high-anonymous proxy supports keep-alive you can consider it to be extremely-anonymous. However, such a host is highly possible to be a honey-pot.

Planet Lab / CoDeeN

PlanetLab proxy servers marked with a icon are from the Planetlab CoDeeN (CDN) Project, a network of educational Internet nodes at Princeton University. These proxies may force a captcha and allocate you a different IP address as advertised.