Just to clarify, this isn't meant to be an anonymity tool. The main issue we were trying to solve was reliability. Cloud IPs get flagged very fast now, even for normal automation or testing.
On the crypto part, we accept USDC as one payment option, but credit and debit cards are also supported.
We're not trying to build something for scammers. The focus is developer use cases. Happy to answer anything specific.
Everything about this is about breaking the rules and ruining shared things, you wouldn't get blocked if you are a good denizen, so I personally will classify this with the scammers and spammers, much to your chagrin.
Automation on the web is very common and often legitimate. Things like automated testing, price monitoring, security research, uptime checks, SEO auditing, even AI agents interacting with sites that explicitly allow it.
A lot of companies run automation against their own systems as well.
The issue we kept seeing was that entire cloud IP ranges get flagged by default, even when the activity itself isn't abusive.
Definitely not trying to encourage breaking rules. Just trying to make legitimate automation more reliable.
Anonymous Credentials is how this is being solved
This sounds like a proxy to the same IPs used by scammers and hackers
> Aluvia runs on crypto
No thanks
Thanks for pointing that out.
Just to clarify, this isn't meant to be an anonymity tool. The main issue we were trying to solve was reliability. Cloud IPs get flagged very fast now, even for normal automation or testing.
On the crypto part, we accept USDC as one payment option, but credit and debit cards are also supported.
We're not trying to build something for scammers. The focus is developer use cases. Happy to answer anything specific.
Everything about this is about breaking the rules and ruining shared things, you wouldn't get blocked if you are a good denizen, so I personally will classify this with the scammers and spammers, much to your chagrin.
Tragedy of the commons.
Automation on the web is very common and often legitimate. Things like automated testing, price monitoring, security research, uptime checks, SEO auditing, even AI agents interacting with sites that explicitly allow it.
A lot of companies run automation against their own systems as well.
The issue we kept seeing was that entire cloud IP ranges get flagged by default, even when the activity itself isn't abusive.
Definitely not trying to encourage breaking rules. Just trying to make legitimate automation more reliable.