IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
189.202.188.149 | mx | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
98.175.31.222 | us | 4145 | 53 minutes ago |
143.42.66.91 | sg | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
80.120.130.231 | at | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
79.110.200.27 | pl | 8000 | 53 minutes ago |
213.33.126.130 | at | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
213.157.6.50 | de | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
194.219.134.234 | gr | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
78.80.228.150 | cz | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
80.120.49.242 | at | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
213.143.113.82 | at | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
194.158.203.14 | by | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
62.99.138.162 | at | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
41.230.216.70 | tn | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
128.199.202.122 | sg | 3128 | 53 minutes ago |
139.59.1.14 | in | 3128 | 53 minutes ago |
183.215.23.242 | cn | 9091 | 53 minutes ago |
79.110.200.148 | pl | 8081 | 53 minutes ago |
79.110.202.131 | pl | 8081 | 53 minutes ago |
190.58.248.86 | tt | 80 | 53 minutes ago |
Our proxies work perfectly with all popular tools for web scraping, automation, and anti-detect browsers. Load your proxies into your favorite software or use them in your scripts in just seconds:
Connection formats you know and trust: IP:port or IP:port@login:password.
Any programming language: Python, JavaScript, PHP, Java, and more.
Top automation and scraping tools: Scrapy, Selenium, Puppeteer, ZennoPoster, BAS, and many others.
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The easiest way to do this is to use online proxy checking services. For example, Hidemy Name. It is free, displays technical data about the connection, and at the same time it also checks the ping.
Fail2Ban is a security tool that analyzes log files for malicious patterns and bans IP addresses that show suspicious activity. Although Fail2Ban is primarily designed to work with TCP-based protocols like SSH, HTTP, and MySQL, it can be configured to work with UDP-based protocols, including UDP flood attacks.
To use Fail2Ban to protect your server from UDP flood attacks, follow these steps:
1. Install Fail2Ban:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install fail2ban
2. Create a custom UDP log file:
Create a log file to store the UDP flood attack data. This log file should be located in the /var/log/ directory, and it should have the appropriate permissions. For example, you can create a log file named udp-flood.log:
sudo touch /var/log/udp-flood.log
sudo chown syslog:adm /var/log/udp-flood.log
sudo chmod 640 /var/log/udp-flood.log
3. Configure Fail2Ban to monitor the UDP log file:
Create a new filter file for UDP flood attacks, for example, /etc/fail2ban/filter.d/udp-flood.conf:
[Definition]
failregex = ^.*UDP.*Flood.*
ignoreregex =
Replace HOST with the actual hostname or IP address of your server, and
Next, create a new action file for UDP flood attacks, for example, /etc/fail2ban/action.d/udp-flood.conf:
[Definition]
actionstart =
actionstop =
actioncheck =
actionban = iptables -I INPUT -s -j DROP; iptables-save
actionunban = iptables -D INPUT -s -j DROP; iptables-save
Replace IP with the IP address of the banned host.
Finally, create a new jail configuration file for UDP flood attacks, for example, /etc/fail2ban/jail.d/udp-flood.local.conf:
[udp-flood]
enabled = true
port =
logpath = /var/log/udp-flood.log
maxretry = 3
findtime = 300
bantime = 1800
action = udp-flood
Replace UDP_PORT with the UDP port you want to monitor.
Reload Fail2Ban configuration:
sudo systemctl reload fail2ban
To connect to a proxy server with a password, provide the proxy address, port, and authentication credentials (username and password) in your browser or application settings. For popular browsers like Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox, follow these general steps:
Open the browser and go to its settings.
Locate the proxy settings section.
Enter the proxy server address, port, username, and password.
Save the settings.
In the "System Settings" section, open the "Network" tab, and then, when you highlight the active connection, click "Advanced". Here, in the "Proxies" tab, tick only the HTTP proxy if you do not intend to use other types of proxies temporarily. Enter the address of your proxy server and its port in the designated fields and click "OK".
In Windows 8 and later editions it is recommended to setup network proxy through Group Policy. To do this, run GPMC.msc (via "Run" or enter in the "Search"), then select the section with the users, from the list of parameters select "Internet Settings". Further settings are not different from the standard ones in Windows. You can set proxy, specify the start page, enter restrictions and so on.
What else…