So, I have a "swarm" of python twitter bots. Their job is to sit in a queue and wait their turn. Their turn comes when the leading bot in the queue gets blocked, the next one then takes its place and the blocked one moves to a new queue.
They all follow the same person[s] and say the same thing. Their purpose is to subtly torment a specific target for a long period of time.
Currently, there are only five of them as twitter limits the number of API keys associated with a single phone number to 5. This is my problem.
How do I get around this?
Twitter blocks the "burner" voip number ranges that are readily available.
Is there a fake phone number API, or something similar?
install gentoo
Why use bots and not basic user accounts?
You could pay real pajeets to do it for you. They charge ridiculously low prices to do repetitive shit
I think they charged like 3 cents per captcha solved when it was text only
>>60193469
Well, they are user accounts. They're just automated to run 24 hours a day
>>60193490
That's a possibility I guess. But I'd like a huge, fully automatic army of robotic shitposters to poison social media
>>60193490
Twitter is just a test bed, their API is very simple. Eventually, after the bugs are worked out, I want each bot to be a self contained entity, complete with facebook, twitter, etc accounts, email addresses and phone numbers. It's grandiose I know, but it's just a interesting project I'm messing around with
Self bump
Bump
>>60193445
>burner voip ranges
Wut?
>>60193490
>3 cents per captcha
That's low?
You can solve a capcha fast as fuck. 3 seconds a capcha means 36 bucks an hour.
360 dollars a day assuming a 10 hour day, 5 days a week for a month is 7200 dollars a month.
That's 86,000 a year.
Holy shit.
>>60194370
Like from this:
>>60194468
that is, assuming it runs in a continuous burst of 3 second captcha perfectly.
>>60194822
Even divided in half it is still 43,000 which is entirely liveable, even comfortably.