Registering with a company networkGmail, why is the failure rate so high?
Because Google marks commercial IP ranges as "high-risk monitoring zones." When you register from a company network, the system simultaneously checks three dimensions: IP reputation, device fingerprint, and identity logic.
Company networks and data center IPs are directly penalized; repeated attempts from the same device will be flagged; even more critical is the identity logic—combinations like "company name + numbers" will be identified as batch registration patterns.
The correct approach is: Use a home network + personal device, enter your real name in pinyin, and ensure the phone number is "clean" (bound to no more than 3 Google accounts).
But the real key lies in pre-registration—first, use the same device to log into Google Search and watch YouTube videos to establish normal user activity. This small preparatory step can increase success rates by 40%.
However, even if registration succeeds, 90% of accounts die within the first week. It's not a technical issue but because almost all foreign trade professionals make the same fatal mistake. Follow us to uncover the "7-day survival rules" for post-registration in our next update.
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