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looking for static residential proxy with port 25 open

hdd001hdd001 Member

is there's anyone know where i can find proxy with port 25 open

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Comments

  • GulfGulf Member

    webshare does not block ports

  • tentortentor Member, Host Rep

    @Gulf said:
    webshare does not block ports

    Spam heaven? Shame for home ISPs who don't restrict 25/tcp outbound by default.

  • hdd001hdd001 Member

    @Gulf said:
    webshare does not block ports

    thnak you, have you tested it

  • hdd001hdd001 Member

    @tentor said:

    @Gulf said:
    webshare does not block ports

    Spam heaven? Shame for home ISPs who don't restrict 25/tcp outbound by default.

    yeah, i think all providers block there outbound traffic, i couldn't find any source

  • GulfGulf Member

    @tentor said:
    Spam heaven? Shame for home ISPs who don't restrict 25/tcp outbound by default.

    They also do not block 43 port, very useful for whois lookups.

  • edited May 2024

    @hdd001 said:

    @tentor said:

    @Gulf said:
    webshare does not block ports

    Spam heaven? Shame for home ISPs who don't restrict 25/tcp outbound by default.

    yeah, i think all providers block there outbound traffic, i couldn't find any source

    That's good. Hopefully it stays this way.

  • kevindskevinds Member, LIR

    @hdd001 said:
    yeah, i think all providers block there outbound traffic, i couldn't find any source

    Not all but most do..

  • angstromangstrom Moderator

    @hdd001 said:
    is there's anyone know where i can find proxy with port 25 open

    Why are you looking for a static residential proxy with port 25 open?

    Congrats on your first post

    Thanked by 1hdd001
  • TionTion Member

    In which country do residential ISP block outgoing port 25? I have never seen a single port being blocked from the ISP but rather them being blocked by consumer grade routers by default configuration and mail hosts blacklisting entire rotating residential ip ranges.

  • raindog308raindog308 Administrator, Veteran

    @Tion said: In which country do residential ISP block outgoing port 25?

    I know of at least two large US ISPs that do it.

  • JabJabJabJab Member
    edited May 2024

    @Tion said: In which country do residential ISP block outgoing port 25?

    Orange does this in Poland for years [and I assume in France too] - you can opt-out by adding some kind of prefix (something like no_protection) to your PPPoE/DSL login.

    By default login (that 99.99999% of people will not change) Orange restricts 25, 135, 137, 138, 139, 445. You can opt-out of 25 blocking (rest stays, 135, 137, 138, 139, 445) by going basic- prefix and epicno_protection- to have everything unlocked.

    Thanked by 1hdd001
  • hdd001hdd001 Member

    @JabJab said:

    @Tion said: In which country do residential ISP block outgoing port 25?

    Orange does this in Poland for years [and I assume in France too] - you can opt-out by adding some kind of prefix (something like no_protection) to your PPPoE/DSL login.

    By default login (that 99.99999% of people will not change) Orange restricts 25, 135, 137, 138, 139, 445. You can opt-out of 25 blocking (rest stays, 135, 137, 138, 139, 445) by going basic- prefix and epicno_protection- to have everything unlocked.

    I'm currently looking for bulk proxy services with this option no_protection and was wondering if Orange offers such services.

  • zGatozGato Member
    edited May 2024

    @JabJab said:

    @Tion said: In which country do residential ISP block outgoing port 25?

    Orange does this in Poland for years [and I assume in France too] - you can opt-out by adding some kind of prefix (something like no_protection) to your PPPoE/DSL login.

    By default login (that 99.99999% of people will not change) Orange restricts 25, 135, 137, 138, 139, 445. You can opt-out of 25 blocking (rest stays, 135, 137, 138, 139, 445) by going basic- prefix and epicno_protection- to have everything unlocked.

    Orange Spain doesn't :) (we don't use PPPoE here though)
    But I literally just tried and none of the ports you mention are blocked kekw (they could be blocking it at the router level so not sure, I'm using my own router)

  • @angstrom said:

    @hdd001 said:
    is there's anyone know where i can find proxy with port 25 open

    Why are you looking for a static residential proxy with port 25 open?

    Well, he wants to use his residential proxies to connect to port 25 to collect HELO banners, which he absolutely can't when using a non-residential IP. It's kind of obvious, isn't it?

    Thanked by 3angstrom zGato sillycat
  • kevindskevinds Member, LIR

    @Tion said:
    In which country do residential ISP block outgoing port 25? I have never seen a single port being blocked from the ISP but rather them being blocked by consumer grade routers by default configuration and mail hosts blacklisting entire rotating residential ip ranges.

    Most? Often there is a way to open outgoing 25, often requiring a switch to static IP. The bigger ISPs often require switching to a business plan.

    Blacklisting entire residental IP ranges will be because the ISP isn't properly doing it, causing their IP space to get very dirty..

  • Most legit residential proxy providers will block requests to use port 25 as well.

  • It's my understanding that almost all residential proxy providers will block port 25
    Why do you need it to be on 25 specifically?

  • hdd001hdd001 Member

    @totally_not_banned said:

    @angstrom said:

    @hdd001 said:
    is there's anyone know where i can find proxy with port 25 open

    Why are you looking for a static residential proxy with port 25 open?

    Well, he wants to use his residential proxies to connect to port 25 to collect HELO banners, which he absolutely can't when using a non-residential IP. It's kind of obvious, isn't it?

    I need it for mass email verification.

  • @hdd001 said: I need it for mass email verification.

    hmmm sure there are no cheaper, easier, and more reliable methods to verify email than using random residential IPs.

    Thanked by 1hdd001
  • hdd001hdd001 Member

    @BruhGamer12 said:
    hmmm sure there are no cheaper, easier, and more reliable methods to verify email than using random residential IPs.

    Some email providers impose rate limits on IPs. Using static residential IPs can help manage and distribute the verification load more effectively, avoiding potential blocks or throttling.

    static residential proxies with outgoing traffic seem to be the best fit for my needs.

  • @hdd001 said:

    @BruhGamer12 said:
    hmmm sure there are no cheaper, easier, and more reliable methods to verify email than using random residential IPs.

    Some email providers impose rate limits on IPs. Using static residential IPs can help manage and distribute the verification load more effectively, avoiding potential blocks or throttling.

    static residential proxies with outgoing traffic seem to be the best fit for my needs.

    ok but why not just pay $5 a year from someone like @jar if you are sending verification emails only.

    Thanked by 1hdd001
  • edited May 2024

    Email verification on port 25... Nothing i've ever seen (email accounts or otherwise) required actually sending emails for verification (i don't think you're planning to run a mailserver behind some socks proxy on a residential connection after all, do you?) . This A] doesn't make sense B] as pretty much any kind of mass account registration screams spam/abuse/you-name-it.

    In general i care very little about blackhat stuff (and this 99% is blackhat stuff) but if that's the chosen route one should also be ready to solve the problems encountered alone.

    Thanked by 1hdd001
  • darkimmortaldarkimmortal Member
    edited May 2024

    @hdd001 said:

    @totally_not_banned said:

    @angstrom said:

    @hdd001 said:
    is there's anyone know where i can find proxy with port 25 open

    Why are you looking for a static residential proxy with port 25 open?

    Well, he wants to use his residential proxies to connect to port 25 to collect HELO banners, which he absolutely can't when using a non-residential IP. It's kind of obvious, isn't it?

    I need it for mass email verification.

    What kind of verification?

  • hdd001hdd001 Member

    @totally_not_banned said:

    In general i care very little about blackhat stuff (and this 99% is blackhat stuff) but if that's the chosen route one should also be ready to solve the problems encountered alone.

    I am committed to following all relevant laws and guidelines to avoid any spam or abuse scenarios. The goal is to enhance the quality of our email communications, not to engage in any blackhat activities.

    and all what i'm asking for is if anyone here know any good service provider that offers high quality static residential bulk proxy with outgoing traffic

    I hope this clarifies my position. If you have alternative suggestions that align with these requirements, I would be eager to learn more.

  • hdd001hdd001 Member

    @BruhGamer12 said:

    ok but why not just pay $5 a year from someone like @jar if you are sending verification emails only.

    Thanks for the suggestion. I appreciate the idea . However, my requirements are quite specific due to the nature of my project

  • edited May 2024

    @hdd001 said:

    @totally_not_banned said:

    In general i care very little about blackhat stuff (and this 99% is blackhat stuff) but if that's the chosen route one should also be ready to solve the problems encountered alone.

    I am committed to following all relevant laws and guidelines to avoid any spam or abuse scenarios. The goal is to enhance the quality of our email communications, not to engage in any blackhat activities.

    Enhance the quality of our email communications ... by sending from residentital IPs (which for a good part are greymarket material at best themselves) ... you might be able to convince your grandmother but ...

    and all what i'm asking for is if anyone here know any good service provider that offers high quality static residential bulk proxy with outgoing traffic

    With outgoing mail traffic supposedly used to activate accounts, which isn't really something that's making a lot of sense, besides such mass registrations usually breaching the user agreement of the target service (which obviously isn't law, i know...). Even if they don't the purpose is still unethical like 99.999% of the time.

    I hope this clarifies my position.

    No.

    If you have alternative suggestions that align with these requirements, I would be eager to learn more.

    The only suggestion i have is: Solve your shady problems yourself or find a place where equally shady people gather. There's enough of those.

    Thanked by 1kevinds
  • hdd001hdd001 Member

    @totally_not_banned said: Enhance the quality of our email communications ... by sending from residentital IPs (which for a good part are greymarket material themselves) ... you might be able to convince your grandmother but ...

    If your mind can only think of port 25 being used for spamming and not for any other legitimate purposes, then I think my grandmother has a more open mind than yours.

    @totally_not_banned said: The only suggestion i have is: Solve your shady problems yourself or find a place where equally shady people gather. There's enough of those.

    yeah it's okay i will, thank you for your time

  • wamywamy Member

    webshare is what I use, good stuff, never tried the port though

  • edited May 2024

    @hdd001 said:

    @totally_not_banned said: Enhance the quality of our email communications ... by sending from residentital IPs (which for a good part are greymarket material themselves) ... you might be able to convince your grandmother but ...

    If your mind can only think of port 25 being used for spamming and not for any other legitimate purposes, then I think my grandmother has a more open mind than yours.

    Do you even understand what i'm saying or do you just don't want to? Please describe your legitimate mass account activation. I'm always willing to learn. It's pretty easy: Want kind of accounts are these and is mass activating them legitimate. That's exactly the main point here (well beyond your claims repeatedly not adding up but lets just ignore this), which you seem to be very keen on not addressing.

    Another interesting point would be how mass activating accounts (your original claim as to what's the intended use case) helps enhancing the quality of your email communications (which sounds just like the most generic zero-meaning-expression possible).

    It's practically always the same with these kind of request. They are obviously 110% legitimate with no unethical component whatsoever but when pressed for any kind of semi-rational explanation there's nothing. Because it's so legitimate noone shall even know the faintest outline of what it is about and no, you haven't clarified your position. All you've presented are contradictions and claims that make no rational sense.

    Legitimate use cases of residential proxies are slim to none in general anyways. It's practically always about circumventing security measures. It's kind of like if i request an anonymous VPS with no egress filtering and then act surprised when people think that i want to run amplification.

    Thanked by 2kevinds Pixels
  • jarjar Patron Provider, Top Host, Veteran
    edited May 2024

    @hdd001 said:

    @totally_not_banned said: Enhance the quality of our email communications ... by sending from residentital IPs (which for a good part are greymarket material themselves) ... you might be able to convince your grandmother but ...

    If your mind can only think of port 25 being used for spamming and not for any other legitimate purposes, then I think my grandmother has a more open mind than yours.

    @totally_not_banned said: The only suggestion i have is: Solve your shady problems yourself or find a place where equally shady people gather. There's enough of those.

    yeah it's okay i will, thank you for your time

    You can't set reverse DNS on residential IPs and you only need to use port 25 if you're delivering mail directly to recipients and not to a mail relay first. This means you are planning to send mail directly from residential IPs to recipient email servers without forward confirmed reverse DNS. I would go as far as to say this behavior has a 100% correlation with spam and a 0% correlation with legitimate activity. The alternative being that the person trying to set this up is not properly educated on the topic and doesn't realize that they don't need this at all.

    What you need is a mail server. You can buy them, rent them, all kinds of things. You can send mail to them, to be sent to your recipients, over ports like 587, 465, 2525, sometimes more. The only system that needs port 25 open is the mail server/relay of your choice, of which you have plenty of choices.

    There is no good use case for using residential proxies to deliver mail directly to recipients unless you're trying to maximize the chances that their mail provider rejects them, and if you're not delivering it directly to recipients then you just don't realize you don't need port 25 open for that. Any way you spin it, this is a candidate for most suspicious post of the year.

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