Google Disrupts NetNut Residential Proxy Network Spanning 2 Million Home Devices
Google has significantly degraded NetNut , one of the biggest networks that turns home devices into rented relays for other people's traffic. Working with the FBI, Lumen, and others, Google's Threat Intelligence Group (GTIG) said this week  it had reduced the network's pool of usable devices by millions. Google identifies NetNut, also tracked as Popa , as a network spread across home devices worldwide, including smart TVs and streaming boxes , and GTIG estimates the network holds at least 2 million devices. If one of those devices is in your home, strangers can route their own traffic through your internet connection, and your address gets the blame for whatever they do with it. How It Works A residential proxy network sells access to real home internet addresses. Attackers pay to route their traffic through your connection so it looks like ordinary home browsing, not the datacenter traffic that security tools tend to block. To build that pool, operators nee...
î Jul 02, 2026