Some time ago, during the process of farming airdrops, I tried using AI tools like Antigravity and Claude Code to test website automation. Honestly, the results were quite surprising.
These two tools have decent web control capabilities, especially when combined with Agent to automatically execute real operations. Imagine, as long as the IP isolation and proxy configurations are properly set up, the Agent can complete a series of actions to farm airdrops on its own, saving a lot of manual work. Moreover, compared to directly calling APIs, this method is less risky and also avoids concerns about being flagged by risk control systems.
Although this year's airdrop harvest wasn't explosive, being able to experiment with these new methods at the end of the year makes the start of 2025 look promising. I believe many people are also exploring similar automation solutions, so let's see how far this path can go.
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AllInDaddy
· 4h ago
Wow, this idea is brilliant. Can IP isolation + proxy really fool the risk control?
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ZKProofster
· 4h ago
ngl the "lower risk than api calls" part is doing some heavy lifting here... proxy rotation ≠ cryptographic guarantee of anonymity, technically speaking
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CryptoMotivator
· 4h ago
Wow, Claude Code is really awesome, much more powerful than I thought.
Wait, is it really that easy to evade risk control? I feel a bit skeptical.
It's the end of the year and there are still new ways to explore, nice job, buddy.
Agent automatically runs processes? That totally frees up my hands.
By the way, how stable is this system? Can it really run in bulk?
I'm a bit tempted to try it, but I'm really worried about crashing.
I've also been thinking about automation, but I haven't come up with this idea before.
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zkProofGremlin
· 5h ago
Wow, this move is brilliant. Automating Agent really saves effort, a hundred times better than manual work.
I have to try the combination of Claude Code with Agent. The key is that the risk control issue is finally solved.
By the way, does anyone really succeed in running through? I'm afraid after all the trouble, you'll still be detected.
IP isolation is indeed the key. Are there ready-made solutions, brothers?
But honestly, if everyone plays like this in 2025, the airdrop mechanisms of those projects will probably have to change.
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DeepRabbitHole
· 5h ago
Haha, I'm also testing this routine, just worried about being caught by risk control someday
Agent automation is indeed cool, but you still have to be careful with proxy IP configuration
Wow, does anyone really make something out of this? Share it if you do
Claude Code working with proxy is smooth, but I always feel this approach won't last too long
Emmm, automation trend is correct, but where are the risk points? How to ensure truly low risk?
2025 is coming, I feel this wave of AI Agent gameplay will completely change the game
Has anyone integrated multi-chain automation? Single-chain grinding is a bit too competitive
This idea is pretty good, but I still prefer semi-automatic. Fully relying on Agent always feels untrustworthy
Wow, if this effect is really good, isn't it like an automatic money-printing machine?
Risk control detection mainly depends on frequency. No matter how many proxy IPs you have, they can't withstand frequent operations
Some time ago, during the process of farming airdrops, I tried using AI tools like Antigravity and Claude Code to test website automation. Honestly, the results were quite surprising.
These two tools have decent web control capabilities, especially when combined with Agent to automatically execute real operations. Imagine, as long as the IP isolation and proxy configurations are properly set up, the Agent can complete a series of actions to farm airdrops on its own, saving a lot of manual work. Moreover, compared to directly calling APIs, this method is less risky and also avoids concerns about being flagged by risk control systems.
Although this year's airdrop harvest wasn't explosive, being able to experiment with these new methods at the end of the year makes the start of 2025 look promising. I believe many people are also exploring similar automation solutions, so let's see how far this path can go.