Android app how to use proxy ip - Android Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

I can use browser to setup proxy server, but it didn't apply to mobile app. so in any social media app , how to set up proxy, so my real ip will be hiden when i post chat in that mobile app? thanks

It is allways quite difficult without knowing your app. But in that case your are lucky.
Just try invizible pro and all you need to do, is pushing the button to start:
-Tor
- SynctDNS and
- I2P
all together. (You can enable or diesable every by itself)
You can use it even without root.
Most is already preset, but here is here is your certain
using guide for Proxymode with netguard firewall
InviZible – InviZible and NetGuard firewall
InviZible – InviZible and NetGuard firewall
invizible.net
and personal DNS filter proxy
InviZible – InviZible and personalDNSfilter
InviZible – InviZible and personalDNSfilter
invizible.net
Overview and source links
InviZible – Main
InviZible – Main
invizible.net
Usually I do not hype an app and set links, but this one is suprisingly real working and in your case as easy as it could be.
If you do not want to install an extra app and keep waiting for gerneral answers, you got some brief documentation how another app is using the different settings for different mode. For me, it realy helped and was kind of compact raodmap to guide myself to for an interesting google search night with upcoming invisibility....

No,not the browser. i'm saying if i use wechat, when i post one wechat message, it will show my ip from Egypt or Australia while i was in London. i want free setup, no commercial tool

Hi there. I saw your post about trying to use a proxy on your mobile apps, and I feel you. It can be a bit tricky to set up a proxy on a mobile app compared to a browser. But I got an idea that might help. Have you checked out ISP proxies? These are the proxies that your internet service provider provides. They're more reliable and stable than other options. One website you can check out is shiftproxy.io. They have a wide range of proxies, and you can find a good one to hide your IP. Just keep in mind setting up a proxy on a mobile app can be more complex than in a browser, so you might need to do some extra digging. Let me know if you have any other questions.

Related

[Q] Twitter and/or Foursquare app with SSL?

Hi,
I'm currently looking for a good Twitter and/or Foursquare client for the Android platform, but I'm not too sure which of the ones currently available in the Market either have an option in the settings to connect via secure connection (i.e. SSL) or which connect this way by default. I know Plume [Twitter client] has this option in the settings, which I like, but I'm exploring other options to see what's out there. I like the look of TweetDark (themed version of TweetDeck) because it allows for both Twitter and Foursquare to be used (among others) but I'm not sure if this connects via SSL or not, or if the app alone can be configured to connect this way like Plume can. Any ideas?
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks .
P.S. I'm not sure if this is the right section to be asking this. If not feel free to move it if you're reading this and you're a mod/admin .

[Q] Hotspot force redirect to Local Server

I got this crazy idea that I don't know is possible or not... what I want to do is set up my phone as wifi access point, then allow people to connect to it, but handle all incoming http traffic myself.
So:
Create a server (with KWS - Android web server)
client can connect to the phone
when client tries to open an http connection to any random server, this has to be intercepted by my app and handled by a local web server
Anyone knows any android app to do this ?
What you are talking about is a captive portal.
I made a simple app for this purpose. If you are a developer, I need your help to improve the app. For downloading the app and source code check this thread https://forum.xda-developers.com/android/general/guide-setup-fake-captive-portal-android-t4011689

[Q] Is secure to use device's IMEI to authenticate it in web service?

Hi. I'm glad to finally be here.
Let me explain the context of my question. I'm designing an application in Android that works consuming a web service. For all inquiries carried out to that web service, you must authenticate to each perform.:silly:
I tried to use SSL certificates for greater security, but at the moment it is too advanced for me just knowing how to create a certificate, then install it on the server and on the client and the connection between them that way (If anyone has a tutorial will be welcome).
For now, I managed to connect via http without any protection. To authenticate the device that performs, IMEI shipping plus a random password (created in the registry).
Well, my question is whether this is an acceptable way or is there more optimal way that take care information that those using the app.
Thank you very much for your help, since I have no one else to turn.

NoRoot Firewall

Disclaimer: I know nothing on how to configure firewalls except for adding apps to the whitelist/blacklist.
Tried using NRFW and I noticed a few things:
1. I've consumed 12.54GB and 9.77GB was by NRFW. What's happening please.
2. I've tagged some apps that can only connect when I'm on wifi, yet I'm still getting notifications when I'm on mobile data. For example, the Facebook app and some games.
3. How do I determine which IP address should be allowed or blocked? For example, I see IP addresses pointing to Akamai and my ISP.
4. Is it a good idea to turn off background data? I restricted it on mobile data and allowed it when on wifi but some apps would not load properly even when I'm connected to a wifi network.
Thanks in advance! And please excuse me if I posted this in the wrong forum.
EDIT: I'm referring to Grey Shirt's NoRoot Firewall.
I read up a bit and learned that 1e100.net are Google's servers. I understand that these point to ads too. I also noticed my ISP's name shows up under these.
Do I allow these or do I block them?
First of all: sorry for answering so late ;-) ...:
- in my opinion, your traffic from internet is being redirected through this NoRoot Personal Firewall unto your smartphone
- so, the 9.77GB you mentioned were 'routed/directed' through the NRPFW - the rest was not (? - maybe for Android-Updates or anything?)
- as you could most probably see, all of these 9.77GB were allowed to pass through from the internet servers (akamai or google or microsoft or ibm or yahoo or many more..) to your smartphone ('s apps / system apps)
- notifications about your mobile connection(s) MAY simply be wrong (as i found out) - seemingly a bug in the NRPFW-app (?)
- akamai is one of the " intermediate servers" or main server for a couple of websites:
for example, when you open the 'WashingtonPost'-website on your smartphone, (all) contents from their website are upon an akamai-server, because 'WashingtonPost' does not have a server on its own inside their office building maybe big enough to handle all traffic from their website to all readers in the world
- your Internet Service Provider has intermediate servers for (any) web content, too - so, you might want to allow their internet addresses
- furthermore, background data is transferred when you have an email-app and this app (gmail or yahoo-app, e.g.) is transferring data even if you had closed the email-app (so you cannot see it anymore on your launcher) or it's even running in background and checking if there's new mail when auto-started while your smartphone is booting.

VPN client for Android and per app routing

Hi,
I'm developing an Android VPN client. I want to know my best options to make a one-click-to-connect vpn client. There is openvpn but the problem with it is the license. I'll have to pay for concurrent users. So, what are my free or cheapest options.
Is there a way to use a vpn that only allows certain apps or ports and the rest are not allowed to use this VPN?
Thank you

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