| | | winge00 | 05-07-2025 01:56 PM | Anti detect browser not holding sticky session I am using bitbrowser anti detect browser, when I try to do sticky session on proxy it does not stay sticky but changes to rotating. I have tested the same on nstbrowser which is holding the sticky. How can I solve the issue on bitbrowser. The thing is I have paid bitbrowser while I have not paid nstbrowser so I can not switch over to nstbrowser that quick. any solutions will be appreciated. |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Following this thread - I have not used that browser and actually, I am afraid of the antidetect browsers |
| WeeWiz | 05-17-2025 08:51 AM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Have you tried using Incogniton? |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by WeeWiz
(Post 1257395)
Have you tried using Incogniton? | Not recommended |
| WeeWiz | 05-17-2025 12:46 PM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by rsot
(Post 1257416)
Not recommended | Why? Used it a few times - worked well |
| winge00 | 05-18-2025 02:01 AM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by WeeWiz
(Post 1257395)
Have you tried using Incogniton? | It is okay, tested on trial, but expensive,
They all are expensive, some are more and others are less. |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by WeeWiz
(Post 1257423)
Why? Used it a few times - worked well | Those kind of antidetect browsers can work for awhile but never know when platform gets flagged about the browser and account goes down - just from what I have understood... |
| rokoko | 05-29-2025 08:12 AM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by winge00
(Post 1257058)
I am using bitbrowser anti detect browser, when I try to do sticky session on proxy it does not stay sticky but changes to rotating. I have tested the same on nstbrowser which is holding the sticky. How can I solve the issue on bitbrowser. The thing is I have paid bitbrowser while I have not paid nstbrowser so I can not switch over to nstbrowser that quick. any solutions will be appreciated. |
Try to use Geelark. They have phone/computer emulation versons. Best we tried. Gives unique fingerprints every profile. |
| SaiJin | 07-12-2025 10:35 AM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by rokoko
(Post 1257953)
Try to use Geelark. They have phone/computer emulation versons. Best we tried. Gives unique fingerprints every profile. |
Like most of us have said, they are not recommended.... |
| moneymoves | 07-13-2025 07:52 PM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Seriously, people need to stop with the anti detect or singular device multi user nonsense.
If you want to manage multiple profiles safely, you need multi login or another similar platform which allows you to basically create sandboxed profiles to use with whatever IP you want. These profiles are all unique - HWID details included.
There's really no other way around it, other than to keep burning through actual physical devices. |
| violin68 | 07-29-2025 06:09 PM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by moneymoves
(Post 1259631)
Seriously, people need to stop with the anti detect or singular device multi user nonsense.
If you want to manage multiple profiles safely, you need multi login or another similar platform which allows you to basically create sandboxed profiles to use with whatever IP you want. These profiles are all unique - HWID details included.
There's really no other way around it, other than to keep burning through actual physical devices. | Multilogin is literally an antidetect service though isn't it? :D |
| Automasters | 07-30-2025 03:03 AM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Yes, why even risk it with an antidetect browser when you can use a portable Firefox or something else? |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by Automasters
(Post 1260092)
Yes, why even risk it with an antidetect browser when you can use a portable Firefox or something else? | Because portable firefox doesn't change any of your fingerprints, its like a bank robber drawing a beard on with a black marker and thinking noone will recognise him. |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by violin68
(Post 1260075)
Multilogin is literally an antidetect service though isn't it? :D | Not a lot of positive feedback seemingly |
| violin68 | 07-31-2025 12:12 PM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by ft16
(Post 1260100)
Because portable firefox doesn't change any of your fingerprints, its like a bank robber drawing a beard on with a black marker and thinking noone will recognise him. | Exactly sites like ebay paypal etc invest tens of millions in antifraud and people think creating another firefox or user profile is enough to hide who you really are like damn :ranger: |
| HiddenSecrets | 08-01-2025 08:07 AM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session i would think an anti track browser would only create a red flag - ebay is going to know you aren't using a normal browser and possibly flag your account |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by HiddenSecrets
(Post 1260190)
i would think an anti track browser would only create a red flag - ebay is going to know you aren't using a normal browser and possibly flag your account | There a difference between anti-detect browsers and anti-track browsers. |
| level4tech | 08-01-2025 11:58 PM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session What is the real difference or benefit of using an anti-detect browser? |
| Automasters | 08-02-2025 03:06 AM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session not worth the risk to me. My method has not failed me yet so I will continue it... |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by level4tech
(Post 1260219)
What is the real difference or benefit of using an anti-detect browser? | It soon becomes impractical to use a different device for each account, a anti-detect browser allows you to run tens, hundreds or even thousands of accounts from the same computer each with different hardware fingerprints.
Unfortunately a lot of anti-detect browsers are pretty bad at spoofing more complicated hardware fingerprints like Canvas or AudioContext and there can also be issues with your fingerprint being too unique. |
| violin68 | 08-03-2025 05:53 PM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by ft16
(Post 1260230)
It soon becomes impractical to use a different device for each account, a anti-detect browser allows you to run tens, hundreds or even thousands of accounts from the same computer each with different hardware fingerprints.
Unfortunately a lot of anti-detect browsers are pretty bad at spoofing more complicated hardware fingerprints like Canvas or AudioContext and there can also be issues with your fingerprint being too unique. | So what are the alternatives? Surely just spamming different Windows users is not viable long term |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by ft16
(Post 1260209)
There a difference between anti-detect browsers and anti-track browsers. | Perhaps clarification needed? I have only heard use of anti-detect browser lingo |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by rsot
(Post 1260329)
Perhaps clarification needed? I have only heard use of anti-detect browser lingo |
Anti-detect browsers are primarily designed for users who need to manage multiple online identities or accounts without being detected as the same person. They're commonly used by: - Digital marketers managing multiple social media accounts
- E-commerce sellers operating multiple storefronts
- Affiliate marketers
- People conducting market research
These browsers create unique "browser fingerprints" by spoofing various parameters like screen resolution, operating system, installed fonts, timezone, language settings, and hardware specifications. Each browser profile appears as a completely different device and user to websites.
Examples would be ADSpower, Dolphin Anti, or Multilogin
Anti-track browsers on the other hand focus on preventing companies from tracking your browsing behavior across websites. They're designed for general privacy protection and typically: - Block tracking cookies and scripts
- Prevent cross-site tracking
- Block ads and trackers
- Protect against fingerprinting by blocking or randomising.
Examples include Brave, Firefox with privacy settings, DuckDuckGo browser, and Tor browser.
Crucially, an anti-detect browser tries to appear as real as possible, and each profile's fingerprint will remain the same so it appears to be the same user returning each time they visit a webpage. Anti-track browsers (depending on the configuration) will try to look like a brand new user every session. |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by violin68
(Post 1260308)
So what are the alternatives? Surely just spamming different Windows users is not viable long term | Really, everyone has to work out what works best for them. Personally, I use a combination of physical devices and anti-detect browsers.
There are other solutions like cloud phones, anti-detect VMs, VPSs, and hardware spoofing tools. Cloud phones can give you mobile device emulation with different device signatures and cellular network characteristics. Anti-detect VMs can give you full hardware spoofing but they're more of a pain to set up and eat up resources.
Even if your browser fingerprint is perfect, there are network fingerprints like passive TCP/IP fingerprinting, latency, network flow, and whether you're using HTTP/3 and QUIC, which could lead to anomalies and your account getting flagged. This stuff gets overlooked a lot but it's actually a big deal. Your network stack can give you away through packet timing and TCP window sizes even when everything else looks clean. HTTP/3 and QUIC make this trickier since they behave totally differently from regular HTTP/2, and support varies depending on your setup.
eBay will also be doing behavioral analysis as well - stuff like how you navigate pages, scroll patterns, typing speed, mouse movements, or how long you pause between clicks. |
| violin68 | 08-06-2025 05:07 AM | Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Quote:
Originally Posted by ft16
(Post 1260341)
Really, everyone has to work out what works best for them. Personally, I use a combination of physical devices and anti-detect browsers.
There are other solutions like cloud phones, anti-detect VMs, VPSs, and hardware spoofing tools. Cloud phones can give you mobile device emulation with different device signatures and cellular network characteristics. Anti-detect VMs can give you full hardware spoofing but they're more of a pain to set up and eat up resources.
Even if your browser fingerprint is perfect, there are network fingerprints like passive TCP/IP fingerprinting, latency, network flow, and whether you're using HTTP/3 and QUIC, which could lead to anomalies and your account getting flagged. This stuff gets overlooked a lot but it's actually a big deal. Your network stack can give you away through packet timing and TCP window sizes even when everything else looks clean. HTTP/3 and QUIC make this trickier since they behave totally differently from regular HTTP/2, and support varies depending on your setup.
eBay will also be doing behavioral analysis as well - stuff like how you navigate pages, scroll patterns, typing speed, mouse movements, or how long you pause between clicks. | Which antidetect browsers do you find best? |
Re: Anti detect browser not holding sticky session Thanks for the clarification f16. | | All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:16 AM. | |
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