Residential proxy networks evade detection in 78% of malicious sessions due to short-lived IP rotation
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· First: 02.04.2026 18:21
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Analysis of 4 billion malicious sessions over three months reveals that residential proxy networks evade IP reputation systems in 78% of cases, challenging traditional network defense assumptions based on traffic origin. The evasion occurs as residential IPs used for malicious activity are predominantly short-lived, active for less than one month in 89.7% of cases and rarely persisting beyond three months. The transient nature of these IPs, combined with rotation tactics, prevents reputation feeds from cataloging malicious infrastructure in time. Roughly 39% of malicious sessions originate from residential networks, yet most remain undetected by reputation systems. The findings highlight the limitations of IP-based defense mechanisms and the need for behavioral detection methods to identify sequential probing, protocol misuse, and device fingerprinting patterns.