Jim Lahey Posted February 1, 2016 Share Posted February 1, 2016 So I bought VIP/Mirror mode for the first time a couple weeks ago and built up 3 goldfarming accounts since then. Just last night I had bought my fishing goldfarmer a bond so he could start on sharks in the fishing guild. Woke up and every account logged in was chainbanned. About accounts banned: x1 Shark Fisher (76 fishing, 63 wc) only account that was p2p. I literally had just bought it a bond before it got banned in the morning. 1x Yew chopper (Nothing special, just a 62 wc yew cutter) 1x Main goldfarmer (Best goldfarming account. Was pretty decent) 1x Misc. goldfarmer (Similar to main goldfarmer, little lower stats) About how I botted: - Played at least a few hours legit on each account. Included easy quests, - ALWAYS ran each account on mirror mode. - No Proxies/VPN/VPS - Tried to bot 10 hours at most with 30 min breaks every hour. Got a little carried away with this and would rotate accounts and bot almost all day, probably why I got banned. Botted mostly while I slept, sometimes during midday on weekdays. Never botted much if any on update days. - Completely unique user/email/passwords. They were hotmail emails too, my first and main 3 goldfarmers had email confirmed. - Only botted using premium SDN scripts. - Deleted random.dat file (or whatever its called) - All f2p except shark fisher who just had bond activated. - Never more than 4 botting at once. - Used a single aged, never botted splashing account as a mule Wealth lost: 3m+ (Including bond I had just bought). I know about how proxies are supposed to prevent this but I was never entirely sure. Dont want to invest more money on a $4 proxy if it doesnt do any good or I could just buy a bond for one of my bots with that money. Would rather risk chainban unless its really worth buying a $4 proxy for each account thatll only last for a month. I had made some backup accounts a few days ago who arent banned now so they are currently training to be my next farmers. Still unsure how I should train them since I planned on making them yew cutters but that will probably get me chainbaanned again. Probably not going to buy a bond for one of my farmers for awhile if ever again. Any help, tips, advice, or calling me a dumbass because I did something really stupid would be great and would help. Thanks. Stay safe everyone. Lahey out. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Electrum Posted February 1, 2016 Share Posted February 1, 2016 Well never have more than 2 accounts logged in at a time, bot for max 5 hours a day. Always know that you will end up being caught no matter what precautions you take. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Animos Posted February 1, 2016 Share Posted February 1, 2016 Bad luck. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stress Posted February 1, 2016 Share Posted February 1, 2016 Having 4 accounts on the same IP is a definite no-no.More than likely they were all flagged a bit ago and they just wanted to track them for a bit to gather data.You move to sharks, they just shut it down. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
liverare Posted February 1, 2016 Share Posted February 1, 2016 Having 4 accounts on the same IP is a definite no-no. More than likely they were all flagged a bit ago and they just wanted to track them for a bit to gather data. You move to sharks, they just shut it down. This. IP addresses are unique for each device which connects to the internet. Take for example a random IPv4 address: 212.134.42.13 The green represents your network, which could be your home router. Your ISP assigns you this. This is a class C IP address (explained here), which is standard for home networks. The blue represents the devices within your house connecting to your router. The most believable way to bot 4 accounts on the same network is to bot on four separate devices as to create 4 unique IP addresses (e.g., 231.134.42.2/8/13/21). But what would be optimal, especially if you can only bot on 1 computer, would be to bot 4 accounts on the same host. You'd need to create multiple static IP addresses and make sure the router's forwarding all data to the same device, and then assign each bot with a designated IP address. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jim Lahey Posted February 1, 2016 Author Share Posted February 1, 2016 This. IP addresses are unique for each device which connects to the internet. Take for example a random IPv4 address: 212.134.42.13 The green represents your network, which could be your home router. Your ISP assigns you this. This is a class C IP address (explained here), which is standard for home networks. The blue represents the devices within your house connecting to your router. The most believable way to bot 4 accounts on the same network is to bot on four separate devices as to create 4 unique IP addresses (e.g., 231.134.42.2/8/13/21). But what would be optimal, especially if you can only bot on 1 computer, would be to bot 4 accounts on the same host. You'd need to create multiple static IP addresses and make sure the router's forwarding all data to the same device, and then assign each bot with a designated IP address. Thanks for this tutorial. Is there a more extensive version of this somewhere? I'm a little confused how you create a new static IP. What do I type in when I add an IP? Does it have to meet certain criteria or be similar to my IP? Thanks again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
liverare Posted February 2, 2016 Share Posted February 2, 2016 (edited) Thanks for this tutorial. Is there a more extensive version of this somewhere? I'm a little confused how you create a new static IP. What do I type in when I add an IP? Does it have to meet certain criteria or be similar to my IP? Thanks again. I have absolutely no idea how to implement this physically. But I understand the theory behind how it works. Device connects to router. Router stores device's MAC address in a table. Router assigns that MAC address with an unique, available IP address. Then... When you load a webpage, your device makes a request and sends it to the router. The router slaps an IP address on the request and forwards it to your IPS. ISP deals with the mystical and magical internet and then sends your router the webpage. The router uses the IP to discover the mac address for which device ordered the webpage. The router forwards the webpage to the device. The device renders it. With this being said, having multiple IP addresses all linking to the same device is something that sounds like it's going to have to be hard coded into the router settings itself. I'm sure it's possible, but I just have no idea how lol. I've been browsing a bit and it may be possible to assign static IP addresses through Windows, but I'm not sure if this means that either the computer will use the first available static IP address, or whether the router will actually use each of the IP addresses as though they were from separate computers. You can set up static IP addresses on your router. Read here. Edited February 2, 2016 by liverare Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...