This is the first article of a series about anti-detect browsers. In this article, we provide an overview of anti-detect browsers and their main features. We also present the most common fraudulent use cases of these browsers. In the next articles, we’ll deep dive into the techniques they use| The Castle blog
This is the fourth article in our series on anti-detect browsers. In the previous post, we explained how to detect anti-fingerprinting scripts injected via Chrome DevTools Protocol (CDP). Here, we analyze Hidemium, a popular anti-detect browser, and describe how it can be detected. We start with a high-level overview of| The Castle blog
This is the third article in our series on anti-detect browsers. In our previous article, we analyzed Undetectable, a widely used anti-detect browser. In this article, we present two effective methods for detecting scripts—especially anti-fingerprinting scripts—that have been injected through the Chrome DevTools Protocol (CDP) in Chrome and| The Castle blog
Headless Chrome bots powered by Puppeteer are a popular choice among bot developers. The Puppeteer API’s ease of use, combined with the lightweight nature of Headless Chrome, makes it a preferred tool over its full-browser counterpart. It is commonly used for web scraping, credential stuffing attacks, and the creation| The Castle blog
Disclaimer: If you're here for the holy grail of bot detection, this may not be it, unless your UX strategy involves surprise popups and your marketing strategy involves blocking Google crawlers. We recently stumbled across a bug on the Chromium bug tracker where a short JavaScript snippet can crash headless| The Castle blog