The best IP provider would be Verizon, AT&T, or T-Mobile because they give multiple IP's and dont have a Data Center as a ISP...
Next best would be your residential ISP (home, friend, or family possibly even wifi at a apartment community pool or small restaurant)(not starbucks or LA Fitness, or any other place where you have to except a terms of service agreement to connect to the internet). Problem is you only get 1 IP in each location.
Anyone who tells you a
VPN provider has the best IP's for stealth account
creation is full of S***
If you can, I'd wait 90 days after making the account to start using a
VPN.
Im guessing this question is directed at
VPN providers.
The odds of a midsize
VPN provider hosting their own servers is slim to none...
And a good dedicated server provider puts in the work to clean their IP's if they are black listed before they recycle them.
Black Listed and being connected to a banned EB or PP account are two different things.
If I had to guess, I'd say that
IPBurger has the best setup with built in kill switch. But OpenVPN needs to be obfuscated to remove all meta data from the packet header that identifies the data as belonging to a OpenVPN protocol, or they have a way to use an added layer of SSL no matter what OS the OpenVPN client is used on (if that's even possible) to protect from deep packet inspection... All this only matters in country's like China with internet censorship.
OpenVPN has the most client options (software used to connect to the server)... Windows, Linux, OS X, Andorid, and iOS.
The software that 24Vc uses is the best VPN protocol. SoftEther. It uses HTTPS/SSL making the VPN data packets indistinguishable for normal HTTP traffic and will pass through any firewall.
The problem with SoftEther is it's really only easy to use with a Windows client. I see there is a GUI for OS x but since I don't have a Mac or a OS x ISO to test on VMware I really cant comment on it.
The SoftEther Client for Linux takes skill to set up through the command line in a terminal and there is no iOS or Android client that doesn't require root.
But... SoftEther is a multiple protocol VPN... It has OpenVPN, L2TP/IPsec, MS SSTP, and SoftEther protocols built in. So it can be used with any of those protocols and clients.
When it comes down to it they will both work for stealth.