IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
27.109.215.216 | mo | 80 | 26 minutes ago |
194.182.163.117 | ch | 3128 | 26 minutes ago |
103.118.47.243 | kh | 8080 | 26 minutes ago |
103.118.46.61 | kh | 8080 | 26 minutes ago |
188.40.59.208 | de | 3128 | 26 minutes ago |
220.248.70.237 | cn | 9002 | 26 minutes ago |
143.42.66.91 | sg | 80 | 26 minutes ago |
203.99.240.179 | jp | 80 | 26 minutes ago |
213.143.113.82 | at | 80 | 26 minutes ago |
102.165.58.218 | kh | 8080 | 26 minutes ago |
62.99.138.162 | at | 80 | 26 minutes ago |
203.99.240.182 | jp | 80 | 26 minutes ago |
41.230.216.70 | tn | 80 | 26 minutes ago |
103.216.50.11 | kh | 8080 | 26 minutes ago |
154.236.177.101 | eg | 1977 | 26 minutes ago |
103.63.190.107 | kh | 8080 | 26 minutes ago |
128.140.113.110 | de | 5678 | 26 minutes ago |
91.241.217.58 | ua | 9090 | 26 minutes ago |
103.118.46.176 | kh | 8080 | 26 minutes ago |
89.145.162.81 | de | 1080 | 26 minutes ago |
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Proxies in Instagram are most often used for two purposes. The first is to bypass access blocking. The second is to avoid being banned when working with several accounts at once. The latter, as a rule, is used when arbitrating traffic, when launching massive advertising campaigns, which allows you not to worry about possibly getting a permanent ban.
Scraping or accessing Twitch chat data programmatically should be done using Twitch's official API, rather than scraping directly from the website, to ensure compliance with Twitch's terms of service. The official Twitch API provides endpoints for accessing chat information.
Here's a general guide on how you can use the Twitch API to retrieve chat data in Python:
Register Your Application:
Get an OAuth Token:
chat:read
and chat:read:admin
scopes for reading chat data.requests
to make HTTP requests to Twitch's authentication endpoint.Connect to IRC (Internet Relay Chat):
irc
or irc3
in Python to handle the IRC connection.irc.chat.twitch.tv
on port 6667
.Join a Channel:
JOIN
command to join a specific channel's chat.JOIN #channel_name
.Read Chat Messages:
Here's a simplified example using the irc
library in Python:
import irc.client
import requests
# Obtain OAuth token
client_id = 'your_client_id'
client_secret = 'your_client_secret'
oauth_token_response = requests.post(
'https://id.twitch.tv/oauth2/token',
params={
'client_id': client_id,
'client_secret': client_secret,
'grant_type': 'client_credentials',
'scope': 'chat:read'
}
)
oauth_token = oauth_token_response.json()['access_token']
# Connect to IRC
class TwitchChatClient(irc.client.SimpleIRCClient):
def __init__(self, channel):
super().__init__()
self.channel = channel
def on_welcome(self, connection, event):
connection.join(self.channel)
def on_pubmsg(self, connection, event):
print(f"{event.source.nick}: {event.arguments[0]}")
channel_name = 'your_channel_name'
client = irc.client.IRC().server()
client.connect('irc.chat.twitch.tv', 6667, 'your_bot_nickname', password=f'oauth:{oauth_token}')
client.add_global_handler('all_events', TwitchChatClient(channel_name).on_pubmsg)
client.process_forever()
To scrape the content of an unordered list (ul) from a web page using Node.js, you can use a combination of libraries such as axios for making HTTP requests and cheerio for HTML parsing. Here's a basic example to get you started:
Install Required Packages:
npm install axios cheerio
Create a Scraper Script:
const axios = require('axios');
const cheerio = require('cheerio');
// URL of the web page you want to scrape
const url = 'https://example.com';
// Function to scrape the content of the ul element
async function scrapeULContent(url) {
try {
const response = await axios.get(url);
const $ = cheerio.load(response.data);
// Replace 'ul-selector' with the actual CSS selector of your ul element
const ulContent = $('ul-selector').html();
console.log('Scraped UL Content:');
console.log(ulContent);
} catch (error) {
console.error(`Error scraping UL content: ${error.message}`);
}
}
// Call the function with the URL
scrapeULContent(url);
Replace 'ul-selector' with the actual CSS selector that matches your ul element.
Run the Script:
node your_scraper_script.js
This example uses axios to make an HTTP request to the specified URL and cheerio to load and parse the HTML content. The $('ul-selector').html() line extracts the HTML content of the ul element based on the provided CSS selector.
Make sure to inspect the web page's HTML structure to find the appropriate CSS selector for your ul element. You can use browser developer tools to inspect the page source and identify the CSS selector that targets the specific ul you want to scrape.
To configure a proxy in Nginx, you need to modify the Nginx configuration file and add the appropriate proxy settings. Follow these steps to set up a proxy in Nginx:
Open the Nginx configuration file: This file is typically located at /etc/nginx/nginx.conf or /etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf, depending on your system and Nginx installation. You may need root or administrative privileges to edit this file.
Locate the http block: Inside the Nginx configuration file, look for the http block, which contains the global settings for your Nginx server.
Add a server block: Within the http block, add a new server block that specifies the domain name or IP address and port number of the client request you want to proxy to another server. For example:
server {
listen 80;
server_name example.com;
location / {
proxy_pass http://your-destination-server.com;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
}
}
Replace example.com with the domain name you want to proxy to the destination server, and http://your-destination-server.com with the destination server's address and port number.
Configure proxy settings: Within the location block, add the necessary proxy settings to forward the client's request to the destination server and pass along the appropriate headers. Some common proxy settings include:
- proxy_pass: Specifies the destination server's address and port number.
- proxy_set_header: Sets the value of specific headers to be sent to the destination server.
- proxy_redirect: Redirects URLs in the response from the destination server to a different URL.
- proxy_connect_timeout: Sets the timeout for establishing a connection to the destination server.
- proxy_read_timeout: Sets the timeout for reading the response from the destination server.
- proxy_send_timeout: Sets the timeout for sending a response to the client.
Save the configuration file: After making the necessary changes, save the Nginx configuration file.
Test the configuration: Before restarting Nginx, test the configuration to ensure there are no syntax errors. You can do this by running the following command:
nginx -t
If the test is successful, Nginx will output Configuration test successful.
Restart Nginx: Apply the changes by restarting the Nginx server. Depending on your system, you can use one of the following commands:
sudo service nginx restart
or
sudo systemctl restart nginx
After completing these steps, your Nginx server will act as a proxy and forward client requests to the specified destination server.
There are lots of ways to use them. For example, you can swap your real IP address location for an American one, thus getting the opportunity to watch Netflix at a bargain price. Or you can set up parsing traffic through a proxy to test the security of your web applications. Or you can create a proxy server on your local network that allows traffic through and blocks requests to certain sites.
What else…