I’m confused about proxy types—shared, dedicated, IPv4, IPv6, residential. What’s the deal with each, and which one’s best for general browsing privacy?
2 comments
Comments (2)
Unknown member
3ore
Whether you're training your first duckling or revisiting the series for a nostalgic trip, duck life continues to offer a charming, entertaining experience that proves even a small duck can achieve great things with enough training.
Like
Unknown member
2 gg fa
Proxy types vary by use case. Shared proxies split IPs among users, which can be slow. Dedicated ones are exclusive, ideal for privacy. For general browsing, an ipv4 proxy https://proxyline.net/en/ipv4/ strikes a good balance—reliable and widely compatible. IPv6 is newer but less supported, and residential proxies mimic real users but cost more. Pick based on your budget and needs.
Whether you're training your first duckling or revisiting the series for a nostalgic trip, duck life continues to offer a charming, entertaining experience that proves even a small duck can achieve great things with enough training.
Proxy types vary by use case. Shared proxies split IPs among users, which can be slow. Dedicated ones are exclusive, ideal for privacy. For general browsing, an ipv4 proxy https://proxyline.net/en/ipv4/ strikes a good balance—reliable and widely compatible. IPv6 is newer but less supported, and residential proxies mimic real users but cost more. Pick based on your budget and needs.