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ISP-Direct Network Architecture vs. Full Enterprise Stack
Network Scale
Proxy Types
Targeting
Reliability
Pricing Model
Dev Experience
Compliance
Support
Quick pick
NetNut fits if ISP-direct residential routing, CDN proxy access, or session consistency without peer-dependency variability are architectural requirements.
Bright Data fits if pool scale above 100M, ASN targeting on residential, a contractual SLA, dedicated residential IPs, HAR instrumentation, mobile proxies, or GDPR DPA availability are requirements.
NetNut and Bright Data both cover residential, ISP, and datacenter proxy types -- but the architecture underneath diverges. NetNut's residential and ISP proxies route through direct partnerships with ISPs rather than peer-to-peer software on user devices. Bright Data routes through its opt-in EarnApp peer network alongside ISP static. That architectural difference affects speed consistency, session behaviour, and compliance framing. Bright Data adds ASN targeting, a SLA, HAR instrumentation, and a mobile pool -- none of which NetNut documents.
If you choose NetNut
What you get that Bright Data doesn't offer
ISP-direct residential routing -- IPs that connect through ISP infrastructure rather than end-user devices, delivering more consistent latency and no peer dependency. A CDN proxy type not commonly available among mainstream proxy providers -- useful for content delivery testing and CDN-aware scraping. No peer churn on static ISP proxies -- session stability comes from infrastructure, not user device availability.
What you give up
Bright Data's 150M+ peer-based residential pool against NetNut's ISP-direct network -- scale and geo-diversity differ. ASN and carrier targeting on residential -- NetNut's targeting documentation stops at country and city. A 15-minute SLA with financial penalty terms. Dedicated residential IPs with exclusive peer assignment. HAR-level traffic instrumentation. Automatic failover. 7M mobile IPs. GDPR and CCPA with a published DPA. Bright Data's pricing model is PAYG-capable with multiple tiers -- NetNut's pricing requires contacting sales for enterprise rates.
If you choose Bright Data
What you get that NetNut doesn't offer
A 150M+ residential peer pool across 195 countries. ASN and carrier-level targeting on residential proxies. A contractual SLA with 15-minute engineer response and financial penalty terms. Dedicated residential IPs with exclusive peer assignment. HAR-level traffic instrumentation through the Proxy Manager. Automatic failover on residential. 7M mobile IPs across 3G/4G/5G. GDPR and CCPA compliance with a published DPA. Self-serve pricing without sales engagement for standard tiers.
What you give up
NetNut's ISP-direct routing -- Bright Data's peer network introduces peer-dependency variability that ISP-direct infrastructure avoids. The CDN proxy type. For teams where session consistency on ISP proxies matters more than pool scale, NetNut's architecture fits that constraint differently.
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