The end, or almost, of the use of proxies on Reddit

what if you access reddit from a browser that doesn’t support H3 at all? In that case, Reddit won’t be able to technically check if your connection supports H3 because your browser won’t even attempt to establish an H3 connection. I mean in antidetect browser you can choose a user-agent of browser so maybe it will work...
That’s an interesting approach! In theory, if the browser doesn’t support H3, Reddit wouldn’t be able to verify it, which could help avoid detection. Using an antidetect browser with a carefully chosen user-agent might be worth testing, but it’s always good to experiment on a few accounts first to see if it makes a difference long-term.
 
That’s an interesting approach! In theory, if the browser doesn’t support H3, Reddit wouldn’t be able to verify it, which could help avoid detection. Using an antidetect browser with a carefully chosen user-agent might be worth testing, but it’s always good to experiment on a few accounts first to see if it makes a difference long-term.
Yeah, i haven't tested it myself yet though. And tbh i doubt reddit itself supports http/3 - most likely it does not
 
what if you access reddit from a browser that doesn’t support H3 at all? In that case, Reddit won’t be able to technically check if your connection supports H3 because your browser won’t even attempt to establish an H3 connection. I mean in antidetect browser you can choose a user-agent of browser so maybe it will work...
Do you know that when you connect to Reddit, various information is collected? Not just the browser fingerprint, which shows your machine's characteristics—if it were that simple, it’d be easy. There's another fingerprint that detects other characteristics.
Browser fingerprint
 
Yeah, i haven't tested it myself yet though. And tbh i doubt reddit itself supports http/3 - most likely it does not
That makes sense! Reddit might not fully support HTTP/3 yet, but even if it doesn’t, using an antidetect browser with a strategic setup could still help. If you decide to test it, it’d be interesting to see if it affects fingerprinting or detection in any noticeable way.
 
It has become a war. H2 and H3 have an impact, but they're not that important.
 
i don't think they only check for the HTTP protocol versions, thats too unreliable as many old devices dont even support HTTP/2 and then they would block a lot of legit users.
 
They DO check http protocol version but that is just one of the many factors that they check. For example if your connection does not support http/3 reddit will deduct some points from your trust score but that does not mean you are a bad actor yet. Now if there are other factors that such as suspicious fingerprint, low email trust score than they will definitely flag you.
 
I feel like I solved the problem but sharing it could only make it discovered by reddit so I might keep it for now, just kidding
 
They DO check http protocol version but that is just one of the many factors that they check. For example if your connection does not support http/3 reddit will deduct some points from your trust score but that does not mean you are a bad actor yet. Now if there are other factors that such as suspicious fingerprint, low email trust score than they will definitely flag you.
What do you mean by a suspicious fingerprint? Wouldn't an anti-detect browser solve the fingerprint issue?
 
Reddit is checking so many metrics now to ensure the peoples are real like mouse movement, reactions speed..... You can't bot much on reddit nowadays unless if you are a very smart coder and understand how is works
 
Reddit is checking so many metrics now to ensure the peoples are real like mouse movement, reactions speed..... You can't bot much on reddit nowadays unless if you are a very smart coder and understand how is works

I strongly disagree. I've had no problem with the most basic automation tasks. Problem with most people is that they make very obvious mistakes, that they fail to mention here, and get their accounts banned as a result. Reddit isn't nearly as sophisticated as ya'll are suggesting. The auto moderation tools used by the administration don't even properly work. They flag things that are very far from being an infraction, and once an appeal is made and reviewed by a human, the ban gets lifted. If they were that good at detecting bots they wouldn't be so bad at detecting when someone is or is not infringing the rules.
 
Most of the time the proxies people use are terrible anyways. Things to check…

Have they been burnt out already? Check block lists, fire requests at the big social networks and websites.

Are common proxy ports open? Normally they are.,

Do they respond to pings? Normally they do and users don’t

I could go on
 
What do you mean by a suspicious fingerprint? Wouldn't an anti-detect browser solve the fingerprint issue?
If you fake the canvas hash by adding noise, they will know since they have a database of all the possible canvases
 
and what about android, residential proxy and mobile reddit app and real use
 
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