CCProxy is a popular Windows-based proxy server software. If you want to route your Android device’s internet traffic through a CCProxy server (e.g., to share a connection, bypass local restrictions, or monitor usage), follow this updated step-by-step guide.
If you want, I can produce a step‑by‑step tutorial for a specific Android version, an example showing how to set up router port forwarding, or a configuration for system‑wide proxy using a particular third‑party app — tell me which one and I’ll generate it.
(Invoking related search suggestions.)
Title: The New Pipe
Logline: An exhausted backend developer stuck on a weekend trip uses a forgotten tool and a brand-new Android phone to become an unlikely hero for a remote hospital.
The Story
Leo stared at his laptop screen, the error code blinking like a red heartbeat: Connection Timeout [Ethernet: Down].
Of course it was down. He was in a converted barn in the Cotswolds, "glamping" with his partner, Maya. The ancient B&B router had a loose cable, and the owner’s solution was to "jiggle it." But Leo wasn't here to browse cat videos. A Level 3 outage had just hit his client—a small regional hospital in Wales. Their patient record system was locked behind a legacy firewall that only accepted requests from whitelisted IPs. His office IP.
He had his work laptop. He had his personal phone, a brand new Android Pixel 9. But no office VPN. No Ethernet. Just spotty 4G.
Maya handed him a cup of tea. "Can't you just... dial in?"
"It's not a phone line," he muttered. "It's a cage. The hospital's server only talks to my office desktop. I'm a ghost."
Then he remembered. A dusty folder on his desktop labeled CCProxy.
He hadn't used it in years. A tiny, lightweight proxy server for Windows. He always kept a portable version on his USB stick—"Leo's digital Swiss Army knife." He plugged it in.
9:00 PM – He installed CCProxy on his laptop in thirty seconds. Configured it to listen on port 808. Whitelisted his own Android's hotspot IP address. The interface was ancient, clunky, but solid. ccproxy android new
9:15 PM – On his new Android, he went into Wi-Fi settings. Long press on the hotspot connection. "Modify network." "Proxy: Manual." Host: 192.168.137.1 (his laptop's local IP). Port: 808.
He hit Save.
For a terrifying second, nothing happened.
Then, his terminal window on the laptop flickered. The SSH tunnel to the hospital's legacy server... connected.
"Holy hell," he whispered.
9:30 PM – He was in. Using CCProxy as a reverse tunnel, his Android phone became the bridge. The phone's 4G -> Laptop -> CCProxy -> Hospital Firewall. Every database query flew through the proxy logs on his laptop screen, scrolling like green rain.
Maya looked over his shoulder. "Did you just hack a hospital with your phone?"
"No," Leo grinned, typing furiously. "I un-broke it. CCProxy on Windows, SSH on Android, and a stupid old Ethernet rule."
11:00 PM – Systems restored. The on-call doctor in Wales sent a single text: "You're a legend. Patient discharged. Thank you."
Leo closed his laptop. He looked at his new Android phone—still warm, still routing the last packets through CCProxy's silent relay.
He turned to Maya. "Okay. I'm done. Let's go see that sheep farm tomorrow."
She smiled. "Only if you leave the proxy in the barn."
Epilogue:
That night, Leo posted a single line in a forgotten tech forum: "CCProxy + Android (new) = still the best emergency lifeline. Never delete the old tools. They just need a new pipe."
End of story.
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To set up CCProxy for an Android device, you primarily need to configure the phone's Wi-Fi settings to point to your CCProxy server's IP address. There is no official "CCProxy" app for Android; instead, the Android system acts as a client to the CCProxy software running on a Windows PC. 0;16;
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Find Server IP: On your PC, open CCProxy and find the Local IP address (e.g., 192.168.1.5). Android Wi-Fi Settings0;35f;0;429;: Go to Settings > Wi-Fi on your Android phone.
Long-press your connected network and select 0;479;Modify Network. Manual Proxy: Check Advanced Options0;404;. Change Proxy to Manual. Proxy Hostname0;508;: Enter your PC's IP address.
Proxy Port: Enter 808 (default for HTTP) or 1080 (for SOCKS).
Save & Connect0;ace;: Tap Save. Your Android traffic will now route through the CCProxy server. 18;write_to_target_document7;default0;cf2;18;write_to_target_document1a;_aMbsaYSdFf23wPAPmZKq6Ac_20;2a; 0;79;0;a3; 📄 Key Resources ("Useful Papers") 0;16; 0;e8f;0;ed3;
Official Manual: The CCProxy User Manual 0;d07; provides a complete walkthrough for server installation and client connection.
Android Specific Guide: This step-by-step tutorial 0;d40; includes screenshots for configuring Android's advanced Wi-Fi options. CCProxy is a popular Windows-based proxy server software
SOCKS5 Setup: For apps requiring SOCKS5, refer to this Scribd Setup Guide 0;a00; for deeper configuration. 18;write_to_target_document7;default0;cf2;18;write_to_target_document1a;_aMbsaYSdFf23wPAPmZKq6Ac_20;2a; 0;79;0;a3; 🛠️ Main Features for Mobile 0;16;
Traffic Compression: Can compress GIF/JPEG traffic to save mobile data.
Web Filtering: Allows you to block specific websites or file extensions from being accessed by the phone0;42f;.
Anonymity: Hides your phone's real IP; search engines only see the proxy server's technical data.
Bandwidth Control: Set speed limits for the connected Android device to prevent it from hogging the network0;a0d;. 18;write_to_target_document7;default0;cf2;18;write_to_target_document1a;_aMbsaYSdFf23wPAPmZKq6Ac_20;2a;
⚠️ Security Note: Some antivirus software may flag CCProxy as a "risk tool" because it is a proxy server. This is often a false positive, provided you download it from the 0;946;Official Site 0;58a;. 0;16;
Are you looking to use CCProxy for saving mobile data or for bypassing network restrictions? 0;16;
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Here’s a helpful write-up for users looking to use CCProxy with an Android device for the first time or after a recent update.
| Problem | Solution |
|---------|----------|
| Android can’t connect | Disable Windows Firewall temporarily or add an inbound rule for ports 808, 1080. |
| Proxy requires authentication | In CCProxy → Account → check “Allow Authentication” and set user/pass. On Android, enter these credentials. |
| Slow browsing | Use SOCKS5 (1080) instead of HTTP. Ensure no bandwidth limiting in CCProxy → Bandwidth tab. |
| CCProxy not seeing Android | Both devices must be on the same subnet. Ping your Android from PC to verify connectivity. |