Currently, those managing multiple accounts often encounter a situation where a newly registered account seems fine at first, but after a few days, it starts getting restricted, and in severe cases, even banned.
Upon investigation, the cause is often not the content, but that the accounts are linked. Even if you are using the same computer and the same network, why can the platform detect that you are operating "multiple accounts"?
Next, we have summarized some key but easily overlooked tips for practical multi-account anti-linking strategies. We hope they can be helpful!

This is the fundamental principle for managing multiple accounts. Each account should have an independent browser environment, including:
• Independent browser fingerprint
• Independent cookies and local storage
• Independent login and operation history
Even if you only log in temporarily to check something, do not mix environments for convenience. When the platform evaluates anti-linking, it most dislikes seeing the same browser fingerprint switching between multiple accounts frequently.
In short: once an account is tied to an environment, do not break it easily.
Many people think changing IP frequently is safer, but in multi-account management, this can trigger risk controls.
Platforms prefer the following behavior:
• Same account
• Consistently using a relatively fixed IP
• Stable and reasonable browser fingerprint
If an account frequently switches IPs or fingerprint environments in a short period, it is easily flagged as abnormal and increases the risk of account linkage.
Practical advice:
• Bind each account to a specific regional IP
• Prioritize IP stability over daily changes
• Keep browser fingerprint parameters consistent long-term
The new account phase is a key observation period for the platform and the most prone to failure. If a newly registered account immediately:
• Likes and follows excessively
• Posts content continuously
• Sends messages or promotes frequently
It basically marks the account as "high risk." A safer nurturing method is:
• Spend the first few days mainly browsing content
• Occasionally like posts, naturally
• Do not immediately conduct obvious commercial activities
In multi-account management, the slower the nurturing, the longer the account lifespan.
When operating multiple accounts simultaneously, avoid creating a “batch” pattern, such as:
• Logging into multiple accounts at the same time
• Posting content in the same time slot
• Changing profile info or avatars simultaneously
These actions are highly visible in the platform’s risk control system.
Recommended approach:
• Stagger login times for different accounts
• Do not synchronize operation rhythm
• Randomize content posting times
Even a few minutes of difference can significantly reduce the risk of multi-account linkage.
Browser fingerprints are not better the more they are modified; the key is whether they resemble real devices. Platforms focus on:
• Whether the operating system and browser version match
• Whether the resolution and graphics card info are reasonable
• Whether Canvas, WebGL, and other parameters conflict
If fingerprint parameters are logically inconsistent, anomalies are easily exposed in fingerprint checks.
Therefore, many experienced multi-account operators conduct a fingerprint check before logging in.
In practice, prevention is far better than remedy. Using the ToDetect fingerprint tool:
• Check whether the current browser fingerprint is abnormal
• Determine if fingerprints are too similar or duplicated
• Identify potential linkage risks
Fix fingerprint issues before logging in, significantly reducing the chance of account linkage or risk control triggers.
Platforms monitor not only environments but also behavior patterns. High-risk actions include:
• Operating at fixed time points
• Highly consistent operation paths
• Almost identical actions across accounts
Optimization strategy:
• Vary operation speed
• Occasionally pause or browse more
• Randomize behavior paths appropriately
The core principle: make the system think a real person is using the account, not performing “batch operations.”
When accounts face restrictions, anomalies, or bans, many first assume it is a content issue. In multi-account management, the root cause is more often environmental.
Suggested troubleshooting order:
• Check for abnormal browser fingerprints
• Check for mixed environments or duplicate fingerprints
• Check if the IP is stable and clean
Finally, examine the content itself; the correct order saves time and effort.
The core of multi-account management is not about “how many accounts” you open, but whether you can operate each account as an independent, real device.
By managing the environment, fingerprints, and behavior properly, and using ToDetect tools for browser fingerprint checks, multi-account anti-linking is completely controllable.