We recommend that Amazon accounts use independent IPs for operations to avoid situations where multiple accounts share the same IP.
Operating an Amazon account: Why use an independent IP?
Having an independent IP can better protect your account security, because Amazon only requires the same seller to open a store on the same site. Otherwise, your account will be closed. The role of the independent IP is to prevent different accounts from using the same IP to log in, and the account is determined to be associated.
Running an Amazon Account: The Impact of Using a Floating IP
1. When Amazon sellers are opening a store, many sellers use the broadband network provided by the service provider, and these broadband IPs are actually floating IPs. When the router is restarted, the IP will change.
2. Many sellers have not been blocked when they operate one or more stores, it just means that the IP they use has not logged into other Amazon accounts for the time being. No, but it is not ruled out that there may still be potential account security risks.
3. If you have multiple Amazon accounts in the office network area, there is a risk of using the same IP. Then it is said that the name account information has been linked, and it will bring immeasurable losses.
Operating an Amazon account: the advantages of using an independent IP
Many sellers cannot avoid working in different places when opening a store. In order to ensure the security of your account, you can use an independent IP to realize localized store management in different places. Otherwise, if the IP security cannot be recognized, the merchant will not be able to normally store the login management elsewhere.
The
bit fingerprint browser can prevent Amazon from linking accounts due to multi-account operations. It can realize isolation and separation, generate a pure fingerprint environment with one key, and prevent mutual access between each other while opening multiple windows, realize account independence and prevent being associated, and avoid unnecessary troubles and losses.