A static IP address is an IP address that is assigned to a device and remains the same, as opposed to a rotating IP address that changes every time a device connects to the Internet. Users assign them to a single device or resource. The address will then remain valid for as long as the user needs it. You can obtain a static IP address through an Internet service provider (ISP), and because static addresses are limited in number and must be assigned individually, they are generally suitable for businesses that need global communications and want to have a fixed identity.
IP is a unified IP address format provided by the IP protocol. It assigns a logical address to each network and each host to mask the difference between physical addresses. A rotating IP address is automatically assigned to a device by a network device. It periodically changes the IP address used to establish a connection to the data source and can schedule this adjustment after a specific duration or after a specific number of requests have been executed. With rotating IP addresses, users can manage a large number of connections from a single device, and it becomes easier to perform network crawling and data scraping operations.