For a long time, the terms native ISP and dual ISP have been used to represent business requirements for high-standard proxy IPs. So how should we understand them?
Generally speaking, if you use whoer.net to check the native IP, and you can see that the DNS and IP address are from the same country, then it can basically be considered native. However, in some special cases, such as Southeast Asia and some European countries, due to the poor local network infrastructure, the DNS will often be resolved to a nearby country. (For example, local service providers in Indonesia often force their DNS servers to point to Singapore IPs)
Kookeey's ISP resources are all purely native and can meet customers' various business needs.
Next, let’s talk about dual ISP. What we mean by dual ISP is that both the IP registrar and the network provider who deploys the IP are recognized as home network providers.
The easiest way to check whether an IP has dual ISP features is to use the ipinfo.io website to check the asn and company type attributes. asn: represents the network provider that deploys the IP; company: represents the registrar of the IP.


Generally speaking, IP features include not only ISPs for home networks, but also businesses and education. Host IPs allocated from cloud vendors or computer rooms are usually marked as hosting, and are more likely to be restricted by services that are sensitive to IP features.
Kookeey static residential proxy comes from the source cooperation of major overseas operators. Any IP with hosting characteristics will be filtered out during the resource cleaning process. Therefore, it has very complete real-person attributes and more complete comprehensive advantages in terms of business performance.
This article comes from online submissions and does not represent the analysis of kookeey. If you have any questions, please contact us