Browsing That Does Not Get Blocked

Browsing That Does Not Get Blocked

Legitimate automation gets blocked all the time, usually for two tells: it behaves like a robot, and it arrives from a data-center IP address. Anti-bot systems watch for both and shut the door, even on research a person could do by hand.

FactoryOS avoids both tells. It moves and types like a person, and it runs from your own premises, so a site treats it like the ordinary visitor it is acting for.

Why Legitimate Bots Get Blocked

The scale explains the aggression. Imperva's 2025 Bad Bot Report found automated traffic surpassed human traffic for the first time in 2024, reaching 51% of the web, with malicious bots alone at 37%.1 Facing a web that is more than half machines, defenses tend to block first and sort it out later.

Most blocking is not about intent, it is about signals. Perfectly straight mouse paths, instant form fills, and traffic from a known cloud range read as automation, so sites challenge or ban them regardless of the reason for the visit.

The cost lands on legitimate users. Price research, availability checks, and public-record gathering get caught in defenses meant for abuse.

Movement That Looks Human

FactoryOS puts a humanization layer between the model's intent and the actual input. When the model decides to click a spot, the layer takes the real cursor position, moves along a natural curved path rather than a straight line, overshoots slightly, then corrects before clicking.

The motion looks like a hand on a mouse because it behaves like one. The mechanical signature that gives most automation away simply is not there.

Typing That Looks Human

Text entry is humanized the same way. Instead of filling a field instantly, the browser types one character at a time at a human pace, occasionally making a typo and fixing it just as a person would.

Small imperfection is the point. Flawless, instant input is itself a tell, and removing it keeps honest sessions from being flagged.

A Local, Trusted Address

Because FactoryOS runs on your own hardware, its traffic comes from your normal business connection rather than a rented cloud range. A data-center IP is one of the first things a defense distrusts, and an ordinary office address never raises that flag.

But an address is no longer the whole story. Imperva reports that attackers increasingly route through residential proxies precisely to look local, so IP reputation alone settles less than it once did.1 That is exactly why behavior carries the rest: a real local address removes the obvious tell, and human-like movement and typing answer for everything after it.

Access That Stays Open

Together, human-like behavior and a trusted address mean the browser keeps working where rigid automation gets locked out. Research that would otherwise stall on a challenge page runs to completion.

The bar is ordinary and everywhere. Even a routine Google search will challenge traffic it judges automated, throwing up a CAPTCHA the moment a request pattern looks mechanical. A browser that moves, types, and connects like a person clears that bar instead of stalling at it.

For a tool whose job is to gather public information reliably, staying unblocked is the difference between a feature and a frustration.

Built to Be Used Responsibly

Capability like this belongs in responsible hands, which is the company FactoryOS is built to keep. It runs on your premises, under your governance, for research you are entitled to do: gathering public information, checking your own properties, monitoring a market.

The right use is the legitimate one. Respect each site's terms and the law, and let the humanization keep honest automation from being mistaken for abuse.

The technology removes the friction; you set the purpose. How much of the public web is effectively closed to you today, not because the data is private, but because the gate cannot tell you apart from a bot?

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