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      • A_D_E_P_T · 6 days ago

        WRT [1], you get a lot more results with https://www.google.com/search?q=site%3Anetnut.io

        And if they didn't even grab the main domain that the service used, why so confident that they've totally dismantled the back end infrastructure?

        • k1m · 6 days ago

          I personally have no insight into what they have or haven't dismantled. Just found the article interesting (had never heard of the company). Was responding to the "They seized the wrong domain" claim in the tweet you quoted. I read that and thought they disabled an unrelated domain, which doesn't appear to be the case. As for the main domain, no idea about that. Someone brought that up to the author of the piece, and the bit I quoted was his response. I have no more info beyond that.

          • KomoD · 5 days ago

            I don't know about "totally dismantled" but it definitely had some impact.

            > As a result of these developments, the Company is currently experiencing disruptions to a portion of its services. If these disruptions continue for an extended period, they are likely to have a material adverse effect on the Company's operations, financial results and its ability to provide certain services to its customers.

            https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/07/03/332182...

      • WarOnPrivacy · 6 days ago

            The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said today it worked
            with industry partners to seize hundreds of domains associated
            with NetNut, a sprawling residential proxy service operated by
            the publicly-traded Israeli company 
            Alarum Technologies [NASDAQ: ALAR].
        • charcircuit · 6 days ago

          Google is pulling up the ladder for other internet crawlers for search engines and AI. It also hurts privacy and anonymity taking away an option to hide your IP without being an obvious VPN exit point.

          • chews · 6 days ago

            Just annoyed that tencent and others are using alternate channels.

            • msh · 5 days ago

              This was more like a fraud where they misled end users into running proxies.

            • iJohnDoe · 6 days ago

              Disrupting a publicly-traded Israeli company? Heads will roll on Monday.

              This will cause a disruption to all sorts of intelligence operations. The FBI didn’t get the memo apparently.

              • chews · 6 days ago

                Should've emailed procurement first

              • rendaw · 6 days ago

                Are residential proxies illegal? Why is the FBI involved with civil actions?

                • msh · 5 days ago

                  It certainly should be when the end users are not doing it on purpose.

                • meszmate · 6 days ago

                  They seized netnut.com, but netnut.io is still online. Not sure how long that'll last though.

                  • awakeasleep · 6 days ago

                    > most of the no-name TV streaming boxes for sale on the major e-commerce websites either come pre-installed with residential proxy software, or require the installation of proxy SDKs in order to use the device

                    > Even people without TV streaming boxes can find their smart TVs enrolled in residential proxy networks, just by installing one of thousands of apps available for download on Samsung and LG smart TVs. In a report released last month, the proxy tracking company Spur found 42 percent of apps available for download via the webOS operating system on LG smart TVs include SDKs that turn one’s television into an always-on residential proxy node. More than a quarter of the apps made for Samsung’s Tizen operating system had similar residential proxy components, Spur found.

                    Most interesting part of the article for me. I wonder if people with a streaming box run into tor-exit-node type problems.

                    • KomoD · 5 days ago

                      > I wonder if people with a streaming box run into tor-exit-node type problems.

                      Some definitely do.

                      One of my family members had a mobile app installed that turned their device into a resi proxy, and I started to get super frequent CAPTCHAs, which I thought was odd. I found out what was happening when our IP got banned from Wikipedia with the reason "believed to be a residential proxy"