Advertising and personal data laws are tightening in Russia and other countries. This directly affects working with ad accounts and requires a more careful approach to launching campaigns.

An ad account ban is not just a temporary problem. It means loss of funds, time spent on farming, launching ads — all leading to one outcome: reduced or complete loss of profit.

Today, it's important not only to choose a profitable offer + creative combination but also to ensure proper technical preparation. This means using an anti-detect browser, working with proxies, and imitating natural user behavior.

Let's break down the main principles of account security and ways to reduce the risk of bans.

Ways to Avoid Ad Account Bans

1. Proper IP and Proxy Management

Each account needs a clean IP. The best option is to use mobile or residential proxies from trusted providers like MobileProxy.Space.

The IP address should not belong to data centers like AWS, DigitalOcean, OVH, or other hosting providers — these addresses often raise suspicions with anti-fraud systems. Proxy geo should match your target audience and selected region, otherwise there's a mismatch between account behavior and its technical data. The ISP should look like a regular internet provider, not a server network. It's important to verify that the IP address isn't on spam lists — you can check this through IPGuardian.net.

If you have many proxies, it's better to automate checking. Automation helps quickly filter out unsuitable IPs.

When using mobile proxies, control IP rotation — for example, with each new browser launch.

2. MoreLogin Browser Fingerprint Configuration

Besides IP, anti-fraud systems analyze device parameters. That's why you need to properly configure your anti-detect browser.

The MoreLogin anti-detect browser allows flexible parameter configuration and digital fingerprint management:

  • Operating system and browser should look logical — for example, Windows with Chrome for desktop or Android with mobile Chrome for mobile traffic
  • Graphics card in the browser fingerprint should match the selected system and not look outdated for the device
  • User-Agent must match screen resolution to avoid contradictions between device type and its parameters
  • Time zone and interface language should be configured strictly according to proxy geo
  • Too many plugins or their complete absence can look suspicious to anti-fraud systems

After configuration, the profile should be checked through special services. They will show: whether the real IP is visible through WebRTC, whether Canvas is masked, and whether DNS and geolocation match.

It's important to update the fingerprint every 1–2 weeks so it doesn't become "burned."

3. Behavioral Factors: Don't Look Like a Bot

Even a perfect proxy won't help if behavior looks like automation.

To make an account not look like a bot, you need to imitate normal human behavior:

  • Make pauses between actions so clicks and transitions don't happen at identical intervals
  • Scroll pages smoothly
  • Don't log into the account at the same time every day — pattern activity is easily detected
  • Browse the feed, leave reactions, reply to messages, and show social activity

Platforms analyze all information: click speed, video viewing time, account login schedule. Behavior must be natural.

4. Account Isolation

You cannot use the same IP for different accounts — this creates a direct link between them. Also, don't use identical cookies — they can become a marker by which anti-fraud combines profiles into one network. It's forbidden to log into multiple accounts from the same browser profile or environment — such overlaps significantly increase the risk of mass blocking.

Before launching ads, delete unnecessary cookies and history. The main goal is to make accounts unlinkable.

Some use cookie bots for profile warming. The key is that visited sites should match the account's geo.

5. Separating Stages: Farming and Ad Launch

First, the profile warms up: social activity, action history, behavior formation. Only after this does advertising work begin.

It's optimal to farm an account in one environment and launch ads in another, "cleaner" work profile without extra traces. This complicates anti-fraud work and helps reduce the risk of bans and mass blocks.

Brief Overview of Account Farming

Currently, new empty accounts get banned quickly, so working in traffic arbitrage without proper warming is difficult.

The concept is simple: create an account life history. Fill out the profile, add photos, subscriptions, likes, comments, video views, messages. The profile develops human activity and doesn't look like a bot.

For farming, use the MoreLogin anti-detect browser and quality mobile or residential proxies. Together, this helps isolate accounts and reduce ban risk.

The process usually looks like this: registration with unique data, basic profile completion, several days of normal activity without advertising, and only then — careful ad cabinet launch. Sometimes "white" ads with a small budget are launched first to increase trust.

Farming is a mandatory stage in working with ad accounts. The more natural the profile looks and the more carefully the process is built, the lower the ban risk and the more stable the results.

GEO Selection and Traffic Volumes

Country selection for ad launches affects moderation and risks. In traffic arbitrage, countries are divided into Tier-1, Tier-2, and Tier-3.

Tier-1 (USA, Canada, UK, Europe, Australia) means a solvent audience and high average check. But this comes with very strict rules and frequent checks. Working in these countries requires maximum trust ad accounts, quality proxies, and a careful launch strategy.

Tier-2 and Tier-3 (Latin America, Eastern Europe, Asia, Africa) are often chosen for testing. There's low competition, cheaper clicks, and softer moderation. But revenue per user is usually lower, and conversion is lower than in Tier-1.

The optimal approach is not to work with just one GEO. It's better to distribute risks: keep some accounts for Tier-1 for expensive offers, and some for Tier-2/3 for volume and testing. This country portfolio helps maintain stability: if rules tighten in one region or bans increase, traffic can be redistributed to other directions.

Conclusion

Technical security is not a minor detail but the foundation of stable work. Everything matters here: proper IP, correct browser fingerprint, natural behavior, clear account farming, and careful ad launch. Any small thing can affect the ad cabinet's lifespan.

Completely "unkillable" accounts don't exist. But if you build protection properly, you can significantly reduce ban risk and extend account operation.