OP 31 August, 2023 - 05:06 PM
(This post was last modified: 31 August, 2023 - 05:09 PM by JingoBlingo. Edited 1 time in total.)
So hear me out, i just had a thought while looking for reliable residential proxy providers.
They sell at around 8.5$/gb let's say, a good provider (not the shitty ones with banners on the forum, im talking about multimillion $ companies.)
with actual millions of ip's in the pool, not asocks the scam that sells rotating proxies that don't actually rotate because their pool is empty.
I have 1GBps of bandwidth, unmetered, I pay 30$ a month.
The total possible bandwidth price for my connection would be 22032000$ 22 fucking millions, at a 8.5$ * GB rate.
As in 8.5$GB * 60(seconds) * 60(minutes) * 24 (hours) * 30 days.
So the difference being 22'032'000$ vs 30$ because of what, I assume IPv4 lease prices (limited amount number)
Now if that's the case,
Both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses come from finite pools of numbers. For IPv4, this pool is 32-bits (2[sup]32[/sup]) in size and contains 4,294,967,296 IPv4 addresses. The IPv6 address space is 128-bits (2[sup]128[/sup]) in size, containing 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456 IPv6 addresses
Now, if the amount of IPv6's is billions of times more,
why is the price only 500 times less?
and why isn't the IPv6 residential proxy price 500 times less than the IPv4?
Another problem:
if there are that many IPv6's
and the price is 49$/month for 64000 ipv6 leased addresses.
that result is the amount of 'packages' the "market" could theoretically lease (LEASE NOT EVEN FUCKING SELL),
at 49 euros each.
What
the
fuck
They sell at around 8.5$/gb let's say, a good provider (not the shitty ones with banners on the forum, im talking about multimillion $ companies.)
with actual millions of ip's in the pool, not asocks the scam that sells rotating proxies that don't actually rotate because their pool is empty.
I have 1GBps of bandwidth, unmetered, I pay 30$ a month.
The total possible bandwidth price for my connection would be 22032000$ 22 fucking millions, at a 8.5$ * GB rate.
As in 8.5$GB * 60(seconds) * 60(minutes) * 24 (hours) * 30 days.
So the difference being 22'032'000$ vs 30$ because of what, I assume IPv4 lease prices (limited amount number)
Now if that's the case,
Both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses come from finite pools of numbers. For IPv4, this pool is 32-bits (2[sup]32[/sup]) in size and contains 4,294,967,296 IPv4 addresses. The IPv6 address space is 128-bits (2[sup]128[/sup]) in size, containing 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456 IPv6 addresses
Now, if the amount of IPv6's is billions of times more,
why is the price only 500 times less?
and why isn't the IPv6 residential proxy price 500 times less than the IPv4?
Another problem:
if there are that many IPv6's
and the price is 49$/month for 64000 ipv6 leased addresses.
that result is the amount of 'packages' the "market" could theoretically lease (LEASE NOT EVEN FUCKING SELL),
at 49 euros each.
What
the
fuck