1. Understand anti-detect browsers. They create isolated browser profiles that spoof your digital fingerprint, including user agent, screen resolution, time zone, fonts, WebGL, canvas and more. This makes each profile appear as a completely different device.
2. Choose an anti-detect browser. Popular options include Multilogin, AdsPower, GoLogin and Incogniton. Multilogin is the industry standard but more expensive. AdsPower and GoLogin are more affordable and offer similar features.
3. Sign up for an account with your chosen provider. You’ll need to verify your email and often provide payment details. If you want to keep your usage separate from your main identity, use a burner email.
4. Create your first profile. Set the operating system, browser type and version. Match these to real-world usage patterns, such as Windows 10 with Chrome, which is the most common and least suspicious.
5. Configure proxy settings for the profile. Each profile needs its own proxy to match its fingerprint. If your profile says New York, use a New York residential proxy. Ensure the fingerprint and IP address align.
6. Set the time zone to match the proxy location. Most anti-detect browsers automatically sync the time zone to the proxy IP. Turn this on so your profile’s time zone matches the IP’s location.
7. Spoof WebGL and canvas. In profile settings, enable WebGL spoofing and canvas fingerprint randomisation. Good anti-detect browsers handle this automatically without you needing to configure each parameter.
8. Add cookies and local storage if you have existing sessions. You can import cookies from a real browser session to warm up new accounts and avoid triggering login verification.
9. Scale up gradually. Start with 5-10 profiles and monitor for any issues. Once you’re confident, scale to 50 or 100. Each profile should have its own unique fingerprint – don’t clone the same fingerprint across multiple profiles.
10. Regularly export and back up profiles. Anti-detect browsers allow you to export profiles as JSON files. Keep backups in case the software crashes or you need to migrate to another provider.