“We are building an AI-scheduled residential network that turns idle bandwidth into enterprise-grade connectivity.”

Individuals become network nodes. Businesses access real-world IP infrastructure.
AI-Scheduled Residential Network

Build a residential network that feels like infrastructure, not inventory.

NetShare uses AI to price route quality, match buyer intent, score node reliability, and filter suspicious usage, so idle residential bandwidth can become enterprise-grade connectivity.

Trusted By High-Signal Teams

Built for buyers who need real-world IP infrastructure

The platform should feel credible before it feels technical. Signal, trust, and product seriousness need to show up visually, not just in bullet points.

700+ routing sessions scored across active node windows
300+ city-level request patterns modeled for matching logic
180+ risk and stability signals evaluated per route tier
Why It Works

Four real AI jobs inside the network

The value is not in saying “AI.” The value is in where the scheduling layer improves economics, buyer fit, abuse resistance, and route quality.

Dynamic pricing. Clean IP history and stable uptime deserve better route value.
Buyer matching. Country, city, latency, and stability become routing filters.
Risk control. Suspicious traffic should be downgraded before it pollutes the pool.
Node scoring. Higher-quality nodes receive more qualifying traffic over time.
AI Control Loop

How the network keeps making decisions.

This should read like a control system, not a stack of identical cards. Each step changes what the network should value next.

Price the route

Cleaner IP behavior and stable uptime support better monetization.

Match the buyer

Country, city, delay, and reliability filters shape which route qualifies.

Score the node

Nodes earn or lose share based on quality signals observed over time.

Filter the risk

Suspicious or low-quality behavior is downgraded before it spreads across the pool.

Build the network from both sides.

Enter through enterprise procurement, contributor onboarding, or the benchmark console. The product should feel like infrastructure with economics, not a brochure about proxies.