Free Proxy List - Dubai
A terminal window he hadn’t opened blinked to life. White text on black scrolled too fast to read. Then it stopped. Your webcam feed is now public. Your browsing history is now public. Your rent payment details from your bank in Sharjah are now public. The proxy you used belongs to us. Thank you for the logistics file. — The Real Client Karim’s blood turned to slush. He slapped the laptop shut, but the damage was done. The free proxy wasn’t a tool. It was a honeypot. The list had been seeded by the very people he was trying to steal from.
“Use a free proxy list,” the encrypted message had added. “Dubai nodes only.”
His phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number, no doubt mirroring the terminal message. He stared at the reflection of the Burj Khalifa in his window. Beautiful. Untouchable. And now, he realized, absolutely full of eyes.
A green bar filled. 20%... 50%... 100%.
His task was simple, according to the email from “The Client”: Access the internal employee portal of a competitor firm. Download the Q3 logistics schedule. Do not use a VPN. Do not use your home IP.
But he was behind schedule. The Client’s deadline was dawn. He copied the IP into Firefox’s proxy settings, felt the faint click of the connection rerouting, and refreshed his browser.
He Googled the phrase:
Too perfect, Karim thought.
Karim sighed. Free proxies were the sewer pipes of the internet—slow, filthy, and full of rats. But a paid VPN would leave a financial trail. A Dubai-based proxy, however, would make his request look like it was coming from a tired office worker in JLT, not a freelance data analyst in a cramped studio.
You are the product.
The results were a graveyard of broken promises. Blog posts from 2019. "Ultimate 2024 List!" with no working IPs. Then, buried on page three, a plain HTML table with sixty entries. No ads. No branding. Just an anonymous list.
Then his laptop fan roared.