Facebook account, how to log in after purchase? How to farm FB accounts?






Facebook Account Farming Details
(1) Prepare a clean IP (an IP that has not been banned before). It is recommended to log in 1 FB per Google Chrome browser, with a maximum of 2 accounts switching in the same browser.
(2) It is best to stay online for 0.5 to 6 hours (for 1 week continuously). For account farming, you must use a brand-new browser environment. If you use a browser that was previously banned by FB, you must completely clear the cache.
(3) After farming a new account for 3 days, you can slowly improve the profile picture, cover photo, etc., then start adding friends and joining groups (be sure not to add too many, start with 1 and increase gradually each day).
(4) After farming a new account for 1 week, do not frequently log out and log back in, as the system may mistakenly think the account is at risk of being stolen and enter security mode. It’s best to stay online for 1 hour after logging in.
(5) Usually, you can like posts or post simple status updates, but do not post ads or links, as FB may restrict your posting ability or directly block your account.
(6) Maintain this farming and activity status until the 7th day, then you can slightly increase your actions, gradually increasing the number of friends and groups added.
(7) On the 9th–10th day, start completing personal information such as address, school, occupation, company, etc.
(8) Farming the account continuously for 1 month will make it very stable. Unless you operate too frequently or violate too many rules, it will not be banned. At this point, you can start sending private message ads, but you must control the quantity and increase gradually.
Common Facebook Usage Questions
Q: How many friends can I add per day?
A: The number varies at different stages. You must test the limits yourself. For example, if you send 10 friend requests within a few minutes and FB prompts you: “Please add people you know,” you should stop immediately and delete the pending requests that haven’t been accepted. Recommendation: For newly logged-in accounts, adding 5–8 friends per day is the safest. After 2 weeks, you can add 20 friends per day. The number is not fixed because account farming is a gradual process of gaining algorithmic trust. If others add you and you accept, there is no limit. Similarly, how many posts can I send to groups within a few minutes without being restricted? How many messages can I send in bulk at once? How many posts per day will attract more followers? All of these require continuous exploration.
Q: What is a stable IP? What is a clean IP?
A: First, IP refers to the external network node IP. Some people use VPNs and choose a location or city—each option is one IP (some beginners think the external IP means their broadband IP, so to clarify: as long as you are doing overseas business, whether using a V*N or proxy, it’s related to your V*N IP or proxy IP, not your domestic network IP. You just need to ensure your domestic network works normally). Some people use proxy services, and each node is one IP. A stable IP means the network speed meets requirements, doesn’t frequently disconnect, and can be used long-term. A clean IP means the network IP hasn’t been banned by FB recently. For example, if you choose a node and FB gets banned, then use the same node to log in to a new account and it gets banned again, that IP is flagged—don’t use it again. Frequent 2FA prompts or operation frequency warnings are also IP issues. Using an unclean IP easily leads to bans.
Q: Why can my friend log in, but I can’t log in with your account? Why was it fine before?
A: Asking this question clearly shows you haven’t thought it through. Many customers here use Kuailian V*N, and they often recommend it to friends. Then you’ll notice that accounts that worked fine at first start performing worse over time. The reason is simple: each V*N platform’s node is not exclusive to you (if you’re using a self-built VPS, don’t rush to object—keep reading). For example, you log in to the U.S. node in Chicago. You tell your friend to use the same one, and now you’re both using the same IP (don’t rush to object—connect to the V*N and Google your IP to check). The more accounts under one IP, the more likely they are to get banned. So don’t ask: why can my friend log in normally, or why was it fine before? Asking that marks you as a beginner, and no one wants to teach beginners how to operate.
Q: Why does Facebook easily ban or lock accounts?
A: During account farming, there’s a high chance FB will ask you to upload a photo. There are three possible reasons: (1) You start adding friends, joining groups, or sending promotional ads right after registration/login. This behavior basically tells FB you’re up to something. (2) FB triggers random security checks to prevent bot registrations. Don’t panic—just follow the steps, and it’s easy to unlock FB, usually via phone or email verification. If you’re asked to upload a photo and your account was purchased and still under after-sales support, contact customer service. (3) IP anomalies cause bans or locks. Many people log in with unclean IPs, making bans inevitable. Also, frequently changing IPs during farming—switching between Japan and the U.S., for example—commonly leads to bans.
Q: What should I do if some Facebook features are restricted?
A: If posting is restricted, it usually lasts about three days. In such cases, stay low-key and reduce activity frequency. If you believe you did nothing wrong, contact customer service to appeal—it’s usually lifted after a few days, so be patient. If FB says your post violates rules but you’re sure it doesn’t, appeal immediately and it will be restored.
Q: Why is my ad feature easily restricted?
A: Facebook has several periods each year when it randomly tightens restrictions. During these times, even real accounts or previously unlocked ones can get banned. Besides timing, the biggest issue is IP. If the IP isn’t clean, logging in may immediately restrict ad features. Sometimes binding a card or changing your name triggers risk control, easily leading to restrictions or bans.