IP NetworX vs a typical SEO host
The shortcuts cheap SEO hosts take are exactly what gets a portfolio clustered and deindexed. Here is what an ordinary multi-site host does, and what we do instead, on the things that actually leave a footprint.
| A typical SEO host | IP NetworX | |
|---|---|---|
| IP addressing | Sequential C-class IPs in one block | Non-sequential A & B class from a 90+ A-class pool |
| Servers | Many sites on one shared server | A different server for every site |
| Location | A single data center | Different locations, often different continents |
| Providers | Every IP owned by the host, one WHOIS | IPs across AWS, Google Cloud, Hetzner, OVH, Vultr, Linode and more |
| Nameservers | One nameserver pair for every domain | A different nameserver per site |
| SSL | A shared certificate chain | Independent SSL per site, free and auto-renewed |
| Control panel | A custom panel that breaks on migration | DirectAdmin + Softaculous + WordPress, fully portable |
| Migration | You move everything yourself | Free, zero-downtime migration from any host |
| Pricing model | Per IP or per GB, and often opaque | Per site, from $2.50/site, less at scale |
| Footprint work | You manage it, site by site | The system scatters every site automatically |
For agencies, not just link builders
If you host client sites, the same isolation that keeps an SEO network unrelated keeps your clients apart from each other. One client's traffic spike, security incident, or billing dispute never touches another's site, because they are on different servers, different IPs, and different nameservers by default. Move a whole book of clients over with free, zero-downtime migration, bill it through per-site pricing, and manage everything from one panel without any of them sharing a neighbourhood.
Is this legitimate hosting?
Yes. Every site is real, publicly reachable web hosting on major cloud infrastructure. "No footprint" does not mean hidden or deceptive: it means there is nothing structural tying your sites to each other, the same way two unrelated businesses that happen to buy hosting separately have nothing tying them together. You own your sites and your content. And if it is not the right fit, there is a 7-day money-back guarantee, no clawback fees.