Infrastructure & Anti-detect
Browser Fingerprint
The unique signature (canvas, fonts, WebGL, timezone) platforms use to link accounts.
A browser fingerprint is the unique signature a platform assembles from dozens of technical parameters — canvas and WebGL rendering, installed fonts, screen resolution, timezone, language, hardware concurrency, audio context — to identify a device even without cookies. Because the combination is close to unique, platforms like Meta and Google use it to link accounts back to the same operator, regardless of IP changes.
Fingerprinting is the reason IP rotation alone never saved a banned buyer: log into a new account from the same unmasked browser and the platform connects it to the dead one within minutes. Buyers manage this with antidetect browsers that generate consistent, realistic fingerprints per profile. The common mistake is an over-randomized or internally contradictory fingerprint — a mobile user agent with desktop screen dimensions — which flags harder than no spoofing at all.
In buyer speech
“The new accounts died before spending a dollar — I bet the fingerprint on those profiles is contradictory, check the WebGL and timezone settings.”