How to not get a bought Twitter account banned?

notNewB

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I'm planning to buy a Twitter account by directly reaching out to the current owner. I'm trying to figure out the risks involved with buying Twitter accounts.

First question first, the geolocation. Will it get banned if I log in to the account from my IP? The target account is created and maintained in the USA and I'm located in Asia. If so, does using an rdp fix the problem for 100%? Or it can still get banned even if I log in to it using a USA rdp?

Second, the account has been inactive for almost two years. If I start actively posting from day 1, does it put the account into risk?

What are some other risks involved with buying a Twitter account?
 
Talk to your internet provider on how to change your IP adress. Mine was pretty easy. Then it should be fine. But remember: DONT LINK YOUR PHONE NUMBER OR EMAIL TO YOUR ACCOUNT because they can also get you banned. Also DONT USE THE SAME PICTURE or USERNAME those can also trigger a ban.
 
Please contact support
 
The account can still work, but when you first log in, you should let the account get used to the browser. In the beginning, just watch the newsfeed, don't interact much
 
You need to work closely with the owner of the account to escape ban. Twitter will demand OTP when they notice some changes. However the whole process sometimes worsens off if the owner is an influencer and his followers notice the account has changed hands. Some could report to support that the account has been hacked. Buying a big page directly from the owner requires steady compliance of the real owner in terms of verifications. Phone and email.
 
My current supplier creates accounts on US IPs. I've been using a VPN with US proxies to run the accounts, and so far, I have no issues.
vpn and proxies are 2 different things. Do you mean VPN set to USA? In that case twitter knows it as they are usually datacenter ip's. Does twitter care? Notfrom my experience, but it depends how hard you bang Elon's sweetheart
 
Have the phone/email swapped out to your so you can verify it if/WHEN asked to.

Haven't really messed with any of that since (THE MAN) Elon took over though so, on the one hand I'm (educated speculation here tbh) there is going to be less banning for content but might be more banning for anything resembling a bot.
 
swap email, usually there is a 48 hours hold and always remove phone too
 
vpn and proxies are 2 different things. Do you mean VPN set to USA? In that case twitter knows it as they are usually datacenter ip's. Does twitter care? Notfrom my experience, but it depends how hard you bang Elon's sweetheart
True. Unless you're using residential/mobile proxies, regular proxies and VPNs are all the same. Both use datacenter IP addresses.
 
I'm planning to buy a Twitter account by directly reaching out to the current owner. I'm trying to figure out the risks involved with buying Twitter accounts.

First question first, the geolocation. Will it get banned if I log in to the account from my IP? The target account is created and maintained in the USA and I'm located in Asia. If so, does using an rdp fix the problem for 100%? Or it can still get banned even if I log in to it using a USA rdp?

Second, the account has been inactive for almost two years. If I start actively posting from day 1, does it put the account into risk?

What are some other risks involved with buying a Twitter account?
Select a mobile proxy for your aged account geolocation and log in through the antidetect browser.
Work with this account in the new profile for several days, behave the same as the previous owner- interests, tweets etc.
Don't make any profile changes.
When Twitter gets used to the new profile, you can change the IP, as if the user had moved to Asia in your case.
 
The account can still work, but when you first log in, let it acclimate to the browser. Initially, just browse the newsfeed without much interaction.
 
If the account has been inactive for two years, starting to post actively can trigger spam detection algorithms. Gradually ramping up activity can help mitigate this risk.
 
Look for sms and email verification when an account change IP twitter will ask for 2fa so make sure you got these before finishing the deal
 
Buying Twitter accounts has risks. Logging in from a different location, even with an RDP, can trigger security checks and possibly a ban. It's not guaranteed safe.

Starting to post heavily after 2 years of inactivity can also raise flags. Gradually increase activity to avoid issues.

Other risks include ownership disputes, account history, or being reported by the previous owner.
 
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