Affiliate Summit East 2025 in New York wrapped on August 5, and the conversations from Booth #1802 at the New York Marriott Marquis are still echoing. For two days on 1535 Broadway, the focus was clear: how to scale multi-account operations without getting banned.

At Masbrowser, we track these industry events to understand what features and capabilities users are actually demanding. Here’s what the summit told us about the state of fingerprint browsers in 2025.

The Big Question: Scale Without the Bans

The dominant theme across the show floor was simple but urgent: how to run dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of accounts without triggering platform audits and account suspensions. Attendees managing anywhere from ten to ten thousand accounts all shared the same pain points:

  • Keeping every browser profile fingerprint truly unique
  • Passing increasingly sophisticated platform checks
  • Eliminating the hours lost to manual browser resets and profile management

Live demonstrations at the booth showed how modern fingerprint browsers can address these challenges. One demo that drew crowds: launching 100 fresh browser profiles in under 90 seconds, each already carrying a distinct device fingerprint. Several partners were so impressed they immediately connected their own proxy lists to test the workflow in real time.

What the Feedback Revealed

The candid feedback from experienced users was invaluable. Veteran affiliate marketers and media buyers asked for deeper API logging capabilities to integrate with their existing automation stacks. Others wanted faster profile cloning features to capitalize on flash sales and time-sensitive campaigns.

The numbers from the event tell part of the story: over 430 badge scans, 87 scheduled follow-up calls, and multiple six-figure deals already in legal review.

But the metric that matters most is trust. One lead buyer shared that he had lost six ad accounts in April and was ready to shut down his entire offer. After running his campaigns through a fingerprint browser for the last week of June, every account remained live and his ROAS had doubled. Stories like this reinforce why the antidetect browser category continues to grow.

What This Means for Your Browser Choice

For anyone evaluating fingerprint browsers, the Affiliate Summit East takeaways are clear:

Profile uniqueness is non-negotiable. Every profile needs a distinct fingerprint that mimics a real device—screen resolution, timezone, fonts, WebGL, canvas, audio context, and more must all vary naturally.

Speed matters. The ability to spin up dozens of ready-to-use profiles in seconds isn’t a luxury; it’s a requirement for anyone scaling operations.

API access is increasingly important. Users want programmatic control to create, manage, and delete profiles through scripts and automation tools.

Real-world testing beats specifications. The best way to evaluate a fingerprint browser is to run your actual campaigns through it and monitor account survival rates.

The Road Ahead

If you missed the event, the conversation continues. Browse the Masbrowser directory to compare fingerprint browsers side by side—review their feature sets, check user ratings, and see which platforms offer free trials so you can test before committing.

The Affiliate Summit East 2025 is over, but the work of understanding what makes a great antidetect browser never ends. At Masbrowser, we’ll keep tracking the feedback, the feature updates, and the real-world results so you can make informed choices.