No.23070
You were banned for satanism, weren't you?
No.23071
>>23070I was banned because I said "Jarty is keyed and redpilled" zeeg jannies cant take jokes now
No.23074
they use something called "useragent". this data is also shared between soywiki and soybooru too. i once got permabanned on soywiki for something unrelated i posted on the sharty on a different IP (i said babyjaks have embedded 'p and the dollcord mafia shot me down for exposing the truth, and my soywiki ban reason was "suspicious posts on sharty"). I figured they were able to do this because i used the same browser with the same useragent. to truly get around this you need to clear cookies and use an useragent switcher, on top of using obscure VPNs
No.23076
>>23074What the useragent, is it like something connected to cloudflare?
No.23077
>>23074>to truly get around this you need to clear cookies and use an useragent switcher, on top of using obscure VPNsAny ways to do that?
No.23078
I used "Opera" instead of Chrome, hut now its not working on opera for some reason
No.23081
Websites primarily detect and ban VPN users by analyzing the IP address (e.g., checking if it belongs to known VPN providers via databases or APIs), not the User-Agent string. �� They also look at factors like time zone mismatches, browser fingerprints, high traffic from shared IPs, or device location discrepancies, which VPNs may not fully obscure. �User-Agent RoleWhile sites can examine the User-Agent for additional clues (e.g., inconsistencies with VPN traffic), it's secondary to IP-based checks and easy to spoof by changing browser settings or using extensions. � VPNs change your IP effectively for most bans, but advanced sites combine multiple signals; simply switching VPN servers or using residential proxies often bypasses blocks.
Idk how true it is
No.23082
>>23076nvm its not but cloudflare do their own job to detect too
No.23088
>>23082Saaar I neef answer