elowen1
New member
I've been comparing several proxies and data collection services recently because I need something for web scraping, localizing results checks, and some region-based access testing. While looking around, I came across TalorData.
As far as I know, they seem to primarily focus on global residential proxies, and this service seems suitable for the following scenarios:
- Web scraping
- E-commerce price and inventory monitoring
- Localized search engine results page (SERP) tracking
-Ad validation
- AI data collection
The following points caught my attention:
- Global geographical coverage
- Residential proxies
- Rotation and session persistence
- City-level targeting
- Static ISP proxies (another option)
- Integration documentation
- 200MB free trial
It was the free trial that prompted me to investigate further. Testing the service without immediate payment is certainly easier, and 200MB of bandwidth should be sufficient for basic setup checks, small tests, and verifying whether the connection quality is adequate for real-world use.
I haven't used this service extensively yet; I'm just sharing my findings to see if anyone here has practical experience using it.
If you're interested, you can claim 200MB to test its effectiveness.
Website:https://talordata.com/?campaignid=u0fSkbQrA5DX0Kek&utm_source=builtbybit&utm_term=builtbybit
As far as I know, they seem to primarily focus on global residential proxies, and this service seems suitable for the following scenarios:
- Web scraping
- E-commerce price and inventory monitoring
- Localized search engine results page (SERP) tracking
-Ad validation
- AI data collection
The following points caught my attention:
- Global geographical coverage
- Residential proxies
- Rotation and session persistence
- City-level targeting
- Static ISP proxies (another option)
- Integration documentation
- 200MB free trial
It was the free trial that prompted me to investigate further. Testing the service without immediate payment is certainly easier, and 200MB of bandwidth should be sufficient for basic setup checks, small tests, and verifying whether the connection quality is adequate for real-world use.
I haven't used this service extensively yet; I'm just sharing my findings to see if anyone here has practical experience using it.
If you're interested, you can claim 200MB to test its effectiveness.