Profile Anatomy
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What an Antidetect Solves, What Proxies Add
Hopefully, you’ve already forgotten what it feels like to frantically switch between browsers and multiple devices, reconfigure proxies, and stress over your digital fingerprint and yet another account ban.
☝️ If you manage multiple accounts — your own or your clients’ — you’re engaging in multi accounting. A multi-account setup means one person or entity controls several distinct accounts on the same platform. Get an antidetect browser and make your life easier. So what’s the catch?
Most account bans and “suspicious activity” flags don’t happen only because of bad cookies. They occur due to 🙅 mismatches across the layers of a profile, including fingerprint, network, and user behavior.
In this article, we’ll break a profile down layer by layer and show what problems an antidetect browser solves, what a proxy for browser adds, and why using an antidetect browser with proxy is usually more stable — especially to manage multiple account workflows.
3 Layers Platforms Can See
Browser
💻 Who are you as a device?
What’s typically included in the browser and device layer:
- Cookies, LocalStorage, session tokens.
- A digital fingerprint (canvas, WebGL, fonts, audio, list of media devices, and so on).
- Interface language, time zone, date/number formats.
- Screen size, device type.
- Extensions.
- Browser type and version.
- User agent.
All these parameters contribute to creating a unique browser fingerprint that can be used to identify or distinguish users across sessions.
You can check your own fingerprint and other data platforms can see about you at amiunique.org. It shows 50+ parameters, so be ready to be surprised.
Network
🔎 Where are you connecting from?
Your network is determined by your IP, its type, ASN, and geolocation. Sometimes this also includes checks for data leaks and DNS.
Let’s say you manage multiple accounts that need to be fully isolated from each other. How can the network layer give you away?
- You log into every account from the same IP address, from the same location.
- Your IP changes too often (every 10 seconds, for example) while you’re working within a single account.
These extremes are rare, but they do happen. Aim for a balanced setup to avoid getting banned.
To achieve optimal anonymity, it is important to select reliable proxy providers, as reviews often evaluate speed, reliability, geo-targeting, and ease of integration. Using proxies with antidetect browsers further enhances anonymity by changing the source of the internet connection.
Behavior
👨🔧 How do you act?
Here the platform looks at the speed and rhythm of your actions, login patterns by time and frequency, “weird” repetitive sequences that resemble mass activity, and how consistently they repeat.
You can also include a few signals here that can reveal links between accounts:
- Payment methods, cards, billing addresses.
- Email and phone number for recovery.
- Backup codes or two-factor authentication details.
- Overlap in contacts, links, and referrals.
- Similar content.
Audience segmentation through separate accounts allows for tailored content to specific demographics or locations, but it comes with challenges. Increased management time and resource demands are significant challenges when handling multiple accounts, as managing several accounts leads to higher daily workloads and a significant time investment for content creation and moderation.
Basically, even if you’ve handled the network and browser layers, if you have multiple accounts with the same recovery emails and the same payment cards, that alone can trigger a block…
What an Antidetect Solves and Where Its Responsibility Ends
🥷 An antidetect browser is the simplest way to manage multiple accounts and keep them isolated. In practice, an antidetect tool covers the browser layer.
Here’s what an antidetect browser can handle for multiaccount work:
- Cookies, LocalStorage, cache, extensions, logins — all kept separate so accounts can’t be linked and pinned to a single owner.
- Separate browser profiles, each with unique fingerprints for different profiles. A fingerprint is a set of browser and environment parameters that websites use to recognize users. Antidetect browsers allow users to create isolated profiles with different browser fingerprints, making it difficult for websites to link accounts to one another.
- Each account managed through an antidetect browser gets its own isolated environment, so if one account gets flagged, the others remain safe.
- Profiles in one workspace instead of juggling different browsers — probably the best option for teams, agencies, or freelancers. With an antidetect browser, you can run dozens or hundreds of profiles, switch quickly, and use additional built-in features.
The catch is: you can have a thousand accounts, but if you’re accessing every single one from your own IP, that kind of multiaccount setup isn’t worth much.
Yes, you can still manage multiple accounts without getting blocked if IP isn’t a critical factor.
What a Proxy Server Adds: The Network Layer
Proxies change your network entry point — and, as a result, how you show up when accessing specific accounts.
When you connect through a proxy for browser, you change:
- Your IP address and often its reputation, depending on the proxy type (residential, mobile, datacenter).
- Your geolocation, sometimes down to a specific ISP.
- Your ASN, which platforms use to infer who you are and where you’re coming from.
Some browsers offer built-in proxy support or function as a proxy browser, making it easier for users to manage their online privacy and access geo-restricted content. Free proxies are available, but they often have limitations in terms of reliability, speed, and their ability to pass anti-detection and fingerprinting tests compared to paid residential proxies.
At the same time, proxies don’t step into an antidetect browser’s territory. Cookies, browser fingerprints, sessions, and similar browser-level parameters remain handled by the antidetect browser.
Dolphin Anty + Froxy, or How Your Profile Layers Start Matching
These days it really feels like antidetect browsers and proxies were made for each other. Our team genuinely likes this match because it’s a near-perfect combo for managing multiple accounts.
It gets even better when you’ve already picked your tools, and they integrate smoothly. Yep, we’re talking about 🚀 Dolphin Anty and Froxy.

So here’s our 🔝 multiaccount setup:
- Dolphin Anty configures 20+ device and browser parameters (including OS- and environment-related ones). Voilà — separate cookies and fingerprints. Antidetect browsers like Dolphin Anty can help users run multiple ad accounts without getting banned by creating unique digital fingerprints for each browser profile.
- Per-profile proxy setup, plus convenient features like bulk proxy assignment across profiles and organizational filters.
- Multiple accounts inside Dolphin Anty that the whole team can access. Managing multiple social media accounts boosts reach and allows targeting niche audiences.
- Froxy datacenter proxies for data collection, QA, and scanning with rotation from 90 to 300 seconds.
- Froxy residential proxies for testing different geos, checking local SERPs and ads, and for accounts tied to a location, and more human usage patterns. Here we run a rotation from 600 to 3600 seconds.
- We use Froxy mobile proxies when we specifically need a mobile carrier and a mobile traffic source. They’re also helpful when a platform is extremely sensitive to IP quality. For mobile account management, using cloud phones and android devices — such as cloud-based Android phones or emulators — provides dedicated, isolated mobile environments that better mimic real user behavior for social media management and automation compared to browser spoofing.
- We don’t break site or platform rules around multiaccounting and restrictions. We respect rate limits, robots.txt, and basic ethics.
With Froxy, you get broad geo coverage and 10+ million IPs. And support is consistently solid — 24/7, no empty promises, and they actually help when something goes wrong (regardless of whose side the issue is on).
What About the “Behavior” Layer?
Dolphin Anty and Froxy cover the browser and network layer, but you still can destroy everything.
In general, these are 📔 the most basic recommendations you’ll find in any multiaccount guide:
- One profile — one specific account on the platform — one dedicated set of proxies, cookies, and logins.
- Don’t enable browser sync (like Chrome Sync) inside profiles.
- Separate 2FA, backup emails, and phone numbers by role (otherwise you create links between accounts, and that’s exactly what we don’t want).
- Use tags or notes for profiles so you’re not relying on memory alone.
- Don’t build profiles that contradict themselves. For example: a Windows fingerprint, but you’re operating on macOS and behaving like a macOS user.
Do that, and you’ll have three aligned profile layers and a real shot at success in pretty much any project.
Conclusion
Antidetect browser tools increase anonymity by masking a user’s fingerprint, while proxy servers act as intermediaries that further hide IP addresses and location data.
Everything else is on you — distributing data across accounts correctly and minimizing any chance they can be linked.
If you’re already using 🔥 Dolphin Anty and 🔗 Froxy, there’s no need to spell out all the benefits of this combo. Or just give these services a try if you’re only getting started with managing multiple accounts.








