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JDye | 2 months ago
We (PingProxies) might be the only company to offer H3 to the proxy/QUIC to the target using the CONNECT-UDP method publicly. Although, it is in beta/unstable until I merge my changes into Rust's H3 library.
If you wanna play around with it, email me and I'll get you some credit. I think theres potential for stealth since outdated proxy clients/servers mean automated actors never use H3.
The proxy industry is full of another 100 companies saying they offer H3/QUIC, when they mean UDP proxying using SOCKS. I suppose the knowledge gap and what customers care about (protocol to end target) is very different to what I care about (being right/protocol to the proxy server).
Manouchehri|2 months ago
That's what I thought too, but it's working for me. (I've sent a lot of tickets, maybe they've put our account as something special without telling me, but doubt it.)
> If you wanna play around with it, email me and I'll get you some credit.
Done, emailed! :) Thanks!
> The proxy industry is full of another 100 companies saying they offer H3/QUIC, when they mean UDP proxying using SOCKS.
Out of the large players I've tested, none actually seem to even support SOCKS5's UDP ASSOCIATE. (I have not tested PingProxies yet.)
> I suppose the knowledge gap and what customers care about (protocol to end target) is very different to what I care about (being right/protocol to the proxy server).
I think there's a knowledge gap between the people making the sales landing pages, and the folks who actually run/maintain the proxy servers. There's some large vendors that advertise UDP support (for residential and/or mobile proxies) that I have yet to actually see working.