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Most platforms evaluate accounts based on long-term behavior patterns rather than individual actions. Trust is built gradually through consistent environments and realistic usage over time. The more stable your setup and behavior are, the less likely platforms are to trigger additional checks.

Key principles

To maintain a stable trust score, follow these core principles:
  • Keep a consistent environment
    Use the same profile, proxy, and location. Avoid frequent changes to IP, country, or fingerprint settings.
  • Grow activity gradually
    New accounts should start with minimal activity and increase it step by step.
  • Maintain session continuity
    Use the same profile regularly instead of switching between profiles or creating new ones.
  • Avoid sudden changes
    Sharp increases in activity, location changes, or device changes may trigger additional checks.
  • Act like a real user
    Natural behavior includes pauses, varied actions, and non-repetitive patterns.

What lowers trust

These actions may reduce account trust and lead to additional checks:
  • Using multiple accounts with the same IP
  • Changing proxy locations frequently
  • Modifying fingerprint settings after use
  • Running the same profile on multiple devices at the same time
  • Performing too many actions right after account creation

Why it matters

If trust drops, platforms may apply restrictions such as:
  • additional verification
  • reduced visibility
  • temporary limitations
In some cases, accounts may lose access to certain features until trust is rebuilt. Stable profiles and consistent behavior help maintain long-term account access.