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Originally Posted by ronny209 subnet u mean the same area |
It means he's eager to help but has only a clue what he's talking about.
I want to be like him when I grow up.
You mobile internet service provider may categorize customers into subnets, but there's no way for a customer to know which subnet he or she is on. Finding your local subnet is ABC, but knowing where you stand with a remote service provider is another matter entirely.
What's a subnet to your ISP might be a gateway to you, and that's mostly invisible from a customer point of view.
Yes, moving 'subnet' will require moving locations. You'd know when you start getting a flurry of new IPs - but that depends on your ISP's configuration - therefore you may still get some of the same IPs in location B that you used to get in A.
What will suffice for you now is to keep a log of the IPs you use and never use the same IP, except you're using it to access an account you've used it on in the past.
If you can keep to that, then you'd be alright.
James has an excel file here to help you see to that.
We have 3UK, O2, Vodafone and EE - but we have run out of IP addresses sort of.
It now takes about 1 - 1.5 hours to access 10+ accounts because we tend to run into IPs that have been used for other accounts.
Don't discount the possibility of that happening to you eventually
You can migrate to a commercial service that manages eBay accounts via APIs, but some of us are afraid fo the risk of being linked.
Another solution to that would be to go to static IPs from services like TalktalkBusiness or BTBusiness. These may limit you to 8 and 5 IPs respectively per line, but you can add additional lines to get more IPs.