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Residential Proxy or VPN: How to Choose

IndustryTrends

The business landscape is going through dramatic changes; emerging and evolving technologies are ensuring that the focus is on customer satisfaction. For instance, OpenAI's ChatGPT is creating a remarkable history; within the short time it was launched, it gained 1 million users because it can replicate human language.

 Large language models (LLMs) such as GPT-3 and Codex occasionally output insecure or incorrect code. This insecure or incorrect code takes us to the question of security while we are focusing on relevancy in the global market.

 The focal point is customer satisfaction; every business must consider satisfying the customer first; how will this work out if you jeopardize the privacy of your customers or even your employees?  Customer satisfaction is crucial to the survival of any business, but is it possible to ensure customer satisfaction when your organization is open to cyber breaches and attacks?

 What efforts are you making to ensure that their personal information, such as passwords and financial details, is protected from hackers? The indices on the ground are not comforting; Rackspace, an enterprise cloud computing giant, suffered a ransomware attack that left thousands of customers worldwide without access to their data in the last quarter of 2022, amongst other far-reaching cyber attacks that year.

 But you have a choice to ensure that your customers' data is secure; you can consider a residential proxy or VPN. To even be safer, you can apply both.

What are a VPN and a residential proxy network?

 A virtual private network (VPN) masks your IP address across all apps and devices by bouncing your data to a different location or country. Prying eyes will not know where you are browsing from; a VPN will protect your identity and enable you to access geo-restricted content.

 Beyond masking your IP address, a VPN will also encrypt your data, convert it into a code, and make it gibberish to anybody who may accidentally lay hands on your personal information such as passwords or financial information you send or receive. A VPN can be free or paid, and millions of people use VPNs across the globe for their affordability (when paid), effectiveness, and ease of use.

Just like you have with a VPN, a residential proxy network masks your browsing location, enabling you to watch geo-restricted content and hide your IP address. A residential proxy bounces your activity on a single application to a proxy server in another country or location, making it appear as if you are browsing from that position.

What is the difference between the residential proxy and the VPN?

 The underlying difference between a residential proxy network and a VPN is that a proxy will not encrypt your data. A residential proxy will ordinarily spoof your data, and any personal information can still be compromised if hackers can identify your base and IP address.

 Since a residential proxy has fewer built-in security measures than VPNs, it won't protect your data or identity; your name and the websites you visit can be accessed easily. Another glaring difference is that you download a residential proxy to mask your IP address on a single application like an internet browser; a VPN, on the other hand, will proffer protection across your entire device.

 When you are using a residential proxy and decide to move into a new browser or app, the residential proxy stops obscuring your IP address.

Which of the two should you use for your business?

 The VPN and residential proxy have peculiar advantages; for instance, each will protect your identity while browsing the web, enable you to stream and share files, and ensure you get around government censorship. A residential proxy will enhance anonymous access to the internet, allow you to select a specific location, and prevent unauthorized access to social media websites by your employees, which will ensure that they focus more on their tasks.

 However, you cannot use a residential proxy to protect your organization's data from a potential breach and on more than one device, which are critical to securing your organization from cyberattacks. You need a VPN to carry out both activities.

 The level of technology integration into the business world demands that everyone must be on alert, just as you are thinking up new technologies to enhance smooth business operations and remain relevant, hackers are bracing up, looking for flaws that will enable them to gain access into your network to wreak havoc. A single measure may not be enough to thwart the effort of hackers.

Looking at residential proxy and VPN, you may not ultimately decide that one is better than the other; the option you choose will depend on the goal your organization has set out to achieve. If you must encrypt your organization's data, you need a VPN because a residential proxy cannot encrypt data. In the same vein, a residential proxy will allow you to block a website you may deem harmful, while a VPN allows you to access geo-restricted blocks.

Conclusion

 The decision you take about which of the two security measures to implement depends on what you want to accomplish; you must endeavor to be a step ahead of whatever new tricks hackers may be fomenting. Every organization should implement measures that will maximize privacy and security; using residential proxies and VPNs in tandem may help organizations to achieve this goal.

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