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Proxies and stolen bandwidth have always been popular among cybercriminals since they allow them to anonymize their traffic. Peer2Profit and Honeygain claim to only share their proxies with theoretically vetted partners, but according to Akamai's research they don’t check if the one offering the bandwidth is the actual owner. The foundation of the proxyjacking problem lies in the fact that these services don’t check where the shared bandwidth is coming from. Customers of the proxy service have their traffic routed through the participants' systems. The participants install software that adds their systems to the proxy-network of the service. There are several legitimate services that pay users to share their surplus Internet bandwidth, such as Peer2Profit and HoneyGain.
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To understand how proxyjacking works, we’ll need to explain a few things.
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A researcher at Akamai has posted a blog about a worrying new trend-proxyjacking-where criminals sell your bandwidth to a third-party proxy service.
![Activation key malwarebytes premium 2.2.1.1043](https://cdn2.cdnme.se/5447227/9-3/16_64e61dfc9606ee7f98e9879e.png)