You dont understand mobile network bruh
When you use a home router, your "dynamic" IP usually belongs to just your house for days or weeks at a time. If someone gets that IP, they are knocking on your digital front door specifically.
On a mobile network, you aren't just one person with a dynamic IP. You are sharing one single public IP address with hundreds or thousands of other people simultaneously.
The "IP Grab" result: If a site grabs your IP, they aren't seeing "User X." They are seeing "One of 5,000 AT&T users in Chicago."
The DDoS Protection: If someone tries to DDoS that IP, they aren't just attacking you—they are attacking the carrier's massive infrastructure. Most carriers have industrial-grade DDoS mitigation that would swallow a "script kiddie" attack without you even feeling a lag spike. Plus, if they did manage to crash that IP, they just kicked thousands of people off the internet, which triggers massive alarms at the carrier's security center.
Home Router: Usually narrows you down to your neighborhood or even your street block.
Mobile Network: Your IP often geolocates to the Gateway (the carrier's data center), which might be 50 miles away in a different city. It tells them you're in "Southern California," but not that you're sitting in a Starbucks on 5th Ave.
@ItzyaboyJJ💯 @Mafia bob