![]() There has been experiments with all kinds of bots, but most of them ended up badly. ![]() Yes, you're examples there are true, sometimes the same IP is used in hotspot scenarios, but then there are various factors that can tell Spotify that it's OK.Īlso, Spotify is updating as we speak, they've tightened their bot detection, and trust me, the IP thing will be the easiest next step for them. Why would I risk using a bot that sends/receives the stream packet information for multiple threads on the same IP? I don't mind spending some money to get quality proxies. ![]() My target is way over 1000 streams / hour, so thinking with proxies comes natural to me. That's completely bullshit and please refrain from posting if you don't have any clue whatsoever.Ĭlick to expand.Dude, I've been doing this for quite some time now, with a bot developed to mimic real life usage, and I've had nothing but success. Or else it's no wonder why Spotify bans your accounts (the one's who are uploading the songs as well as the one's who're listing (your bots)). Create multiple accounts and/or set up realistic fake profiles, combined with social media authority. The only reason why people get banned from Spotify is when they're a completely fresh account and suddenly get 400k+ streams a month on a shitty dubstep playlist. You can, and I guarantee this, run at least 50 players from the same IP, ~1.000 streams per hour, hence you can easily deliver 24k+ streams per 24h (and the 50 threads are the bare minimum I used as an example). Moreover, when you'd use free proxies you would have many people streaming at the same time - so it doesn't make any difference. Otherwise, it'd be stupid to use Spotify e.g. While playing you can run them all on the same connection. ![]() To clarify things: You can only send the authentication itself and certain commands from different proxies. Click to expand.That's completely bullshit and please refrain from posting if you don't have any clue whatsoever.
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