Alias browser
Features How it works Pricing Guides Download FAQ
Get Alias
Guides · Account safety

Why accounts get banned

And how to manage multiple accounts safely · Last updated 1 May 2026.

Platforms rarely ban accounts at random. They cluster accounts that look connected — same device, same network, same patterns — and act on the whole cluster. Understanding those signals is the key to keeping multiple accounts healthy.

What are the most common reasons accounts get banned on platforms like Instagram and Amazon?

The recurring technical causes are about linkage:

  • Shared browser fingerprint — the same canvas/WebGL/font signature across accounts.
  • Shared IP address — many accounts logging in from one IP.
  • Linked cookies/storage — sessions that bleed between accounts in one browser.
  • Reused details — the same email, phone, or payment method on multiple accounts.

Then there are behavioral signals: sudden activity spikes, bulk identical actions, robotic timing, or logging into dozens of accounts from a single machine in a short window.

How can I manage multiple social media accounts safely?

The goal is to make every account look like a separate person on a separate device:

  • Isolate identity — a unique, consistent fingerprint per account.
  • Isolate network — one dedicated proxy IP per account, in a sensible region (see our proxy guide).
  • Isolate storage — separate cookies and local storage so sessions never connect.
  • Separate metadata — distinct emails, phone numbers, and payment methods.
  • Behave like a human — warm up new accounts gradually and avoid bulk identical actions.

What tools and strategies help manage multiple Instagram or Facebook accounts?

The foundational tool is an anti-detect browser, which automates fingerprint, cookie, and proxy isolation per profile. Around it, use quality residential or mobile proxies (one per account), keep each profile's timezone and locale aligned with its IP, and maintain separate credentials per account. Scheduling tools can help you post consistently, but they don't prevent linkage — the isolation layer does.

How Alias Browser helps

Alias Browser gives each account its own isolated profile: a real, consistent fingerprint, isolated cookies and storage, and a dedicated per-profile proxy or VPN — with the timezone and locale kept consistent with the proxy region. That removes the most common technical linkage signals automatically, so your accounts are far less likely to be clustered together.

Note: avoiding bans is about not looking like one operator running many accounts. It does not override a platform's rules — always operate within each platform's terms and your local laws.

Keep every account separate

Unlimited isolated profiles, real fingerprints, and per-profile proxy & VPN — the isolation that prevents linkage, built in. Try Alias Browser free.

Download Alias Browser → · Browse all guides →

← All guides

© 2026 ByteVault Enterprise · All rights reserved. Alias Browser™ · Made for operators