Incogniton Anti-Detect Browser Review
If you're running more than one account on any online platform these days, be it Amazon, Facebook, TikTok, or Google Ads, standard browsers are a liability. Thanks to browser fingerprinting, an anti-privacy and anti-anonymity technique used by these websites, your accounts, whether they are set up with malicious intent or a genuine one, are at a high risk of being “banned.”
Using just proxies won't solve this. That works for simple tasks like just wanting to access a geoblocked site. A proxy only changes your IP address. It does nothing to protect your browser fingerprint, which is made up of dozens of identifiable parameters most users are not even aware of.
For workflows involving multi-accounting, privacy, automation, or identity separation, you need an anti-detect browser alongside proxies to properly isolate both your IP layer and browser identity layer.
In a previous article, we talked about AdsPower, which is one example of these specialised browsers. Today, we talk about Incogniton. Before we show you how to set it up with Bird Proxies, here is a short review of what Incogniton is and what it feels like to use, especially if this is your introduction to the software.
What is Incogniton?
Incogniton is a Chromium-based anti-detect browser built specifically for profile isolation and multi-account management.
As with any anti-detect browser, its basic feature is the ability to create multiple fully isolated browser profiles. Unlike standard browsers, where sessions often leak information through shared cookies, storage, hardware signatures, and browser metadata, every Incogniton profile operates as a completely separate browsing environment. Each profile has its own cookies, local storage, session data, browsing history, and a fully configurable identity layer.
To online platforms, each pofiles look like entirely different person on a completely different device in a completely different location. Profiles leak data between sessions: shared cookies, overlapping storage, consistent hardware signatures
Incogniton allows you to edit and customize many of the data points websites use for browser fingerprinting; parameters like Canvas signatures, WebGL renderer data, audio fingerprinting, installed fonts, timezone, language, geolocation, screen resolution, hardware concurrency, and device memory.
If you do not want to configure these manually, the built-in fingerprint generator handles most of the work automatically. Instead of generating random or inconsistent values that look machine-created, it builds fingerprints designed to appear internally consistent and realistic.
Beyond browser isolation and anti-fingerprinting, Incogniton includes several built-in workflow tools that become genuinely useful at scale.
The Synchronizer
The Synchronizer mirrors actions across multiple profiles simultaneously. Whatever you type or click in the lead profile is replicated across the rest in real time. For repetitive social account tasks, airdrop farming, or any workflow that involves doing the same thing across many profiles, this is a significant time saver.
Paste as Human Typing
Paste as Human Typing simulates manual keyboard input rather than delivering text at machine speed. Platforms increasingly flag instant paste events because no real human types that fast. This makes profile setup and content entry look natural rather than automated, which matters on sensitive platforms.
The Cookie Collector
The Cookie Collector lets you import, export, and manage cookie states across profiles. Profiles loaded with realistic cookie history hold up far better than sterile fresh profiles. You can pre-warm profiles with authentic-looking browser history before launching them into sensitive operations.
Bulk Profile Creation
Bulk profile creation removes the manual setup drag as soon as you're past a handful of profiles. Incogniton's bulk creator gets you from zero to a full library in a fraction of the time it would take individually.
Automation Support
Automation support via Selenium, Puppeteer, and REST API means Incogniton fits into existing automated workflows without requiring a full rebuild.Instead of replacing your automation logic, Incogniton acts as the browser identity layer sitting underneath it. If you are already running Selenium-based workflows, integrating Incogniton is relatively straightforward.
Where Incogniton Fits Best
One limitation of Incogniton is that it remains largely a general-purpose anti-detect browser.
Unlike highly specialized tools such as Kameleo or SessionBox, which target narrower use cases and advanced fingerprinting scenarios, Incogniton occupies a more practical middle ground. It is powerful enough for serious multi-account workflows, while remaining accessible enough for users without deep technical expertise.
It works particularly well for:
- E-commerce operators managing multiple storefronts on Amazon, eBay, or regional marketplaces
- Social media managers handling multiple client accounts across Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok
- Affiliate marketers requiring profile separation and geolocation control
- Crypto users and airdrop farmers managing multiple wallet-linked browser environments simultaneously
For agencies and teams, its collaboration and synchronization tools also make large-scale account management more manageable.
Another major advantage is accessibility.
Incogniton has over one million users and one of the more approachable pricing structures in the anti-detect browser space. The free plan includes 10 browser profiles with no time limit and no credit card requirement. For beginners, that is enough to test real workflows before committing financially. Its paid plans start at $29.99/month for 50 browser profiles under the Entrepreneur tier.
How to Set Up Bird Proxies in Incogniton (A Step-by-Step That Takes Less Than 2 Minutes)
If you don't already have an Incogniton account and the anti-detect browser installed on your device, that is the first thing you should do. Here is how you can do that: download it from incogniton.com and create an account. (This video explains it better).
Once that is done, follow the steps below to integrate Bird Proxies with Incogniton.
Step 1: Retrieve your Proxy Connection Details
Once your Bird Proxies plan is active, you can find your connection details directly on your dashboard:
- Log in at www.birdproxies.com and navigate to your active proxy plan.
- In the dashboard, you will find all necessary proxy access details, including your endpoint hostname, port, username, and password.
- Note down your proxy credentials: Host/IP, Port, Username, and Password.
Step 2: Integrate Bird Proxies with Incogniton
Now that you have your proxy details, it is time to configure them in Incogniton:
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In the Incogniton app, click New Profile to create a new browser profile, or open an existing profile to edit it.
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Navigate to the Proxy section in the profile settings sidebar.
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In the Connection type field, select HTTP/HTTPS or SOCKS5, depending on the protocol you selected in your BirdProxies dashboard.
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Fill in the following fields:
- Proxy IP:Port - Enter the host and port number provided by Bird Proxies.
- Proxy Username - Copy this from your Bird Proxies dashboard credentials.
- Proxy Password - Use the password associated with your proxy.
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Click the Check Proxy button. If the setup is successful, a "connected to proxy" confirmation will appear with your proxy details displayed.
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Click the Create Profile button on the profile summary pane to save your settings.
Your Bird Proxy is now successfully integrated with Incogniton.
Step 3: Verify Your Proxy Configuration
To confirm everything is working correctly:
- Launch your newly created profile in Incogniton.
- Visit a site like Whoer.net.
- Check the displayed IP address and location. They should match the proxy details you configured from BirdProxies
Conclusion
Gaining the upper hand in the internet battle of achieving your interests and not bowing to the online platforms’ towering demands requires that you have the right tools. The Incogniton and Bird Proxies combo is one of those tools.
Modern online platforms aggressively track users across both IP addresses and browser fingerprints. Trying to manage multiple accounts without properly isolating those layers is increasingly unreliable. Incogniton handles the fingerprint layer: isolated profiles and built-in tools that make multi-accounting manageable at any scale. Bird Proxies handles the IP layer: Tier-1 ISP IPs with 0 fraud score, 100GBPS infrastructure, and clean subnet diversity.
Pairing both gives you a full-stack setup that's clean, fast, and hard to flag at any scale.
Start with Bird Proxies today and test the setup yourself.
