Socks4-24-11-22-02-48-45.txt May 2026

SOCKS4 does not support encryption or authentication. Avoid sending sensitive data (passwords, banking info) through these nodes unless you are using an additional layer of encryption like HTTPS/SSL.

The filename appears to be a timestamped log or data export, likely containing a list of SOCKS4 proxy servers (IP addresses and ports) harvested at a specific time (November 22, 2024, at 02:48:45) . SOCKS4-24-11-22-02-48-45.txt

import socks import socket # Define proxy settings from your .txt file PROXY_IP = "192.168.1.1" PROXY_PORT = 1080 socks.set_default_proxy(socks.SOCKS4, PROXY_IP, PROXY_PORT) socket.socket = socks.socksocket # Now all socket traffic is routed through the SOCKS4 proxy import urllib.request print(urllib.request.urlopen("http://ifconfig.me").read()) Use code with caution. Copied to clipboard Security Note SOCKS4 does not support encryption or authentication

If you are a developer, use the PySocks library to route your traffic through one of these SOCKS4 entries: import socks import socket # Define proxy settings from your

Proxy lists found in this format are often "public" and highly volatile. You should run a proxy checker to verify which IPs are still "alive" and have low latency.