: Automated sending of requests to targeted IDs.
The reality was that by 2010, Facebook had introduced rudimentary anti-bot measures. Version 7.1.3 got around these by rotating "User Agents" (making Facebook think you were using different browsers) and integrating with "Death by CAPTCHA" services to pay 1 cent per solved puzzle.
On day four, Facebook fought back. His account was temporarily locked for “unusual activity.” He verified his phone number. He promised to behave. He turned the Blaster speed down to “Stealth.”
He tried to run it on a new account. It worked
By mid-2011, GuruFuel began scrubbing Blaster Pro from their marketplace. They pivoted to "Facebook Ad Manager" tools, which were essentially white-hat wrappers for Power Editor. Users who bought 7.1.3 found that their license servers were offline by late 2012.
One night, a real client—a local bakery owner named Elena—messaged him. “Marcus, I wanted to hire you for a logo, but I saw you’re friends with that ‘Get Rich Click’ page that posts conspiracy theories. Are you… okay?”
: Automated sending of requests to targeted IDs.
The reality was that by 2010, Facebook had introduced rudimentary anti-bot measures. Version 7.1.3 got around these by rotating "User Agents" (making Facebook think you were using different browsers) and integrating with "Death by CAPTCHA" services to pay 1 cent per solved puzzle. Facebook Friend Adder - Blaster Pro 7.1.3 -2010- -GuruFuel
On day four, Facebook fought back. His account was temporarily locked for “unusual activity.” He verified his phone number. He promised to behave. He turned the Blaster speed down to “Stealth.” : Automated sending of requests to targeted IDs
He tried to run it on a new account. It worked On day four, Facebook fought back
By mid-2011, GuruFuel began scrubbing Blaster Pro from their marketplace. They pivoted to "Facebook Ad Manager" tools, which were essentially white-hat wrappers for Power Editor. Users who bought 7.1.3 found that their license servers were offline by late 2012.
One night, a real client—a local bakery owner named Elena—messaged him. “Marcus, I wanted to hire you for a logo, but I saw you’re friends with that ‘Get Rich Click’ page that posts conspiracy theories. Are you… okay?”