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Why doesn’t anyone sell IPv6 residentials?

by Atomical - 12 November, 2024 - 04:11 AM
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(This post was last modified: 12 November, 2024 - 04:13 AM by Atomical. Edited 1 time in total.)
I always see people sell IPv6 datacenter proxies for about more or less $100 a week or usually around there and they usually have a absurdly large subnet like /32 or /30 (and I don’t know why because a /64 subnet has like 2^68 IPs already). I also always see people selling mobile proxies, rotating or static, but are always IPv4. But I don’t think I’ve ever seen a IPv6 mobile (Or residential!) proxy subnet being sold. Why is that? I think it’s definitely worth doing as most websites support IPv6 and setting up a IPv6 mobile proxy isn’t difficult either.

Let me know your thoughts or what you might think pricing may be. (USA)
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Most ISPs and mobile carriers worldwide still largely operate on IPv4 for end-user connections, and many haven’t fully adopted or deployed IPv6 for customers. Even if websites support IPv6, the networks that home and mobile users access often do not.
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This post is by a banned member (Atomical) - Unhide
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(12 November, 2024 - 04:16 AM)hike Wrote: Show More
Most ISPs and mobile carriers worldwide still largely operate on IPv4 for end-user connections, and many haven’t fully adopted or deployed IPv6 for customers. Even if websites support IPv6, the networks that home and mobile users access often do not.

Well in the US (or so I've heard), most major carriers and ISPs have rolled out IPv6 for a while now.

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