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who can guess the bot? 🤔 if guess right you get access to it ones done ☑️
To reduce the chances of your social media accounts getting hacked, focus on a mix of strong authentication, good device hygiene, and careful behavior online.
Here’s a practical checklist:
1. Strong, unique passwords
- Use a different password for every social platform.
- Make them long (at least 12–16 characters) and hard to guess: a mix of words + numbers + symbols (e.g., a passphrase).
- Avoid names, birthdays, pet names, or anything visible on your profile.
2. Use a password manager
- Tools like 1Password, Bitwarden, Dashlane, or LastPass can generate and store complex passwords.
- Then you only need to remember one strong master password.
3. Turn on 2FA (Two-Factor Authentication)
- Enable 2FA for each account (Facebook, Instagram, X/Twitter, TikTok, etc.) in Security/Privacy settings.
- Prefer an authenticator app (Google Authenticator, Authy, Microsoft Authenticator) or hardware key (like YubiKey) over SMS when possible.
- Save backup codes in a safe place in case you lose your phone.
4. Lock down your email account
- Your email is usually the “master key” to reset passwords.
- Use a strong, unique password + 2FA on your main email.
- Regularly review recovery options (backup email, phone number) and remove old ones you don’t use anymore.
5. Watch out for phishing
- Be skeptical of messages saying “Your account will be deleted” or “You violated our terms” with a link to “verify” your account.
- Check the sender carefully and the URL before clicking. Official emails usually come from the platform’s real domain (e.g., @facebookmail.com, @support.twitter.com, etc.).
- Don’t enter your password on a site you reached through a random DM or email link; go to the platform directly via the app or by typing the URL yourself.
6. Secure your devices
- Keep your phone and computer OS and apps updated (security patches).
- Use a screen lock (PIN, fingerprint, Face ID) and don’t share it.
- Install apps only from official stores (App Store, Google Play).
- Use antivirus/antimalware if you’re on Windows (and be careful with downloads).
7. Limit third-party app access
- In your social media settings, check “Apps and websites” or “Connected apps.”
- Remove anything you don’t recognize or no longer use (e.g., old quiz apps, games, random tools).
- Be cautious granting permissions like “full account access” just to see “who viewed your profile” (those are often scams).
8. Privacy and public info
- Don’t post sensitive information (full birthday + address + phone number) publicly—those can be used to guess security questions.
- Avoid using security questions with answers that are easy to find online (like your school or pet’s name). If possible, use fake answers you can remember, not real ones.
9. Use secure networks
- Avoid logging into your accounts on public Wi‑Fi if you can; if you must, use a VPN.
- Always log out on shared or public computers and don’t let browsers save your password on them.
10. Regular security checkups
- Review login activity and active sessions in your account settings. Log out of devices you don’t recognize.
- Change passwords immediately if you notice: login alerts from unknown locations, messages sent you didn’t write, or email saying “password changed” that you didn’t request.
If you tell me which platforms you use (Instagram, Facebook, X/Twitter, TikTok, etc.), I can give step-by-step instructions for securing each one specifically.
You can’t “force” an unban, but a clear, polite message to WhatsApp Support sometimes works—especially if the ban was automatic or a mistake.
Here’s what to know and a template you can use.
---
## 1. First, check what kind of ban it is
Open WhatsApp → If you see something like:
- “Your phone number is banned from using WhatsApp”
then it’s an account ban.
Common reasons:
- Using unofficial/modified WhatsApp apps (GBWhatsApp, FMWhatsApp, etc.)
- Bulk messaging/spam, adding people to groups without consent
- Violations of Terms of Service (harassment, scams, auto-bots, etc.)
If you really did violate policy (e.g., spam, automation), they usually don’t unban.
If you think it’s a mistake, then appeal.
---
## 2. How to contact WhatsApp Support
You can contact them via:
1. From WhatsApp (if still accessible)
Settings → Help → Contact us
2. By email (recommended)
- For Android: support@whatsapp.com
- For iPhone: support@whatsapp.com (same address)
- Use the email address linked to your WhatsApp account if possible.
Include:
- Your full phone number in international format:
+[country code][number] (e.g., +1 555 123 4567)
- Device type (Android/iPhone)
- Short explanation of the situation
---
## 3. Strong but polite appeal message template
You can copy, adapt, and send this to support@whatsapp.com:
---
Subject: My WhatsApp Number Was Banned – Request for Review and Restoration
Email body:
Dear WhatsApp Support Team,
My WhatsApp account associated with the number +your country codeyour phone number was recently banned. I kindly request a detailed review of this decision and, if possible, the restoration of my account.
To the best of my knowledge, I have always tried to follow WhatsApp’s Terms of Service and Community Guidelines. If any activity from my account was flagged as a violation, I believe it may have been due to a misunderstanding or an unintentional mistake.
- Phone number: +your full number
- Device: Android/iPhone, model
- Approximate date/time of ban: date/time
WhatsApp is very important to me for briefly mention purpose: family communication / business clients / school / work, etc., and losing access has had a serious impact on my ability to stay in touch.
If any specific action on my account caused this issue (for example, using an unofficial app, auto-forwarding messages, or any other behavior), I sincerely apologize. I am fully willing to correct this and strictly comply with all WhatsApp policies going forward. I will:
- Use only the official WhatsApp application from the official app store
- Avoid any bulk messaging or automated tools
- Respect user consent and privacy in all communications
I respectfully request that you re-examine my account and consider lifting the ban. If you cannot restore the account, I would appreciate any information you can share about the reason, so I can avoid such issues in the future.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
Sincerely,
Your Name
WhatsApp number: +your full number
---
## 4. Important tips
- Be honest: If you used a modded app or did bulk messaging, admit it briefly and promise not to repeat it.
- Don’t spam support: Send one clear, detailed email. If no reply after ~48–72 hours, you can send a polite follow-up.
- Switch to official app: If you used GBWhatsApp/FMWhatsApp, uninstall it, install official WhatsApp, and mention this in your email.
- Know that some bans are permanent: If they reply saying the ban is final, there’s no official way around it; you may need a new number.
---
If you tell me:
- What message you see on your screen, and
- Whether you used any modified apps, bulk messaging tools, or automation
I can tailor a more precise message for your specific situation.powerful Al bot use now will be paid soon 🔜 real time life teaching coding Python Java etc many more 5,000+ intelligent created by mr python code
https://t.me/Africacodingbot
*Al intelligence bot created by mr Python code with this bot you can learn hacking of Python coding mustly for cyber security student use now*
https://t.me/Africacodingbot
Here’s the core difference between white hat and black hat, mainly in the context of cybersecurity (and similarly in hacking/SEO):
### 1. Intention & Legality
- White Hat
- Ethical and legal.
- Goal: improve security, find and fix vulnerabilities, protect users.
- Work with permission (e.g., hired security testers, penetration testers).
- Black Hat
- Unethical and often illegal.
- Goal: exploit systems for personal gain (money, data, power, disruption).
- No permission; often hide their identity and break laws.
### 2. Methods
- White Hat
- Use hacking tools and techniques but follow rules and laws.
- Report vulnerabilities to the owner and help patch them.
- Document their work and follow professional standards.
- Black Hat
- Use similar or more aggressive techniques but for harm or profit.
- Exploit vulnerabilities, steal data, install malware, or cause damage.
- Hide findings, sell them, or use them to attack.
### 3. Examples
- White Hat:
- A penetration tester hired by a company to simulate attacks and report weaknesses.
- Security researchers doing bug bounties and responsibly disclosing bugs.
- Black Hat:
- Hackers stealing credit card data.
- Writing ransomware or breaking into accounts to sell data.
### 4. In SEO (Search Engine Optimization)
The terms are also used in SEO:
- White-hat SEO: Follows search engine rules, focuses on real value (good content, proper structure).
- Black-hat SEO: Breaks rules (keyword stuffing, link farms, cloaking) to trick search engines.
If you tell me the context you’re interested in (hacking, SEO, etc.), I can give more targeted examples.
what Bot 🤖 should I creat next give me suggestions I will take suggestions from you guys
I’m not completely sure what you mean by “telegram ban,” so let me cover the main possibilities. Tell me which one you need and I’ll go into detail or write code if needed.
1. You want to ban a user in your own Telegram group/channel (as an admin or via a bot)
- As a group admin (no bot):
- Open the group → tap the user’s message → “More” → “Restrict” / “Ban” (wording varies by app version).
- You can choose duration and what actions to restrict (send messages, media, etc.).
- With a Telegram bot (Python + python-telegram-bot), for example:
from telegram import Update
from telegram.ext import ApplicationBuilder, CommandHandler, ContextTypes
TOKEN = "YOUR_BOT_TOKEN"
async def ban(update: Update, context: ContextTypes.DEFAULT_TYPE):
# /ban @username or /ban user_id
if not update.message:
return
if not update.message.reply_to_message and not context.args:
await update.message.reply_text("Reply to a user or provide user_id/username.")
return
if update.message.reply_to_message:
user_id = update.message.reply_to_message.from_user.id
else:
# for simplicity assume numeric user_id
try:
user_id = int(context.args[0])
except ValueError:
await update.message.reply_text("Provide a numeric user_id.")
return
try:
await context.bot.ban_chat_member(
chat_id=update.effective_chat.id,
user_id=user_id
)
await update.message.reply_text("User banned.")
except Exception as e:
await update.message.reply_text(f"Failed to ban: {e}")
async def main():
app = ApplicationBuilder().token(TOKEN).build()
app.add_handler(CommandHandler("ban", ban))
await app.run_polling()
if __name__ == "__main__":
import asyncio
asyncio.run(main())
2. You want to block someone from contacting you personally
- Open the chat with the user → tap their name/top bar → “Block User”.
3. You want to report someone so Telegram might ban them
- In the chat: tap their message → “Report” → choose reason (spam, violence, etc.).
- Or in groups/channels: similar “Report” option, depending on client.
4. Your own account is banned/limited and you want to fix it
- Go to Settings → Help → Ask a question or email recover@telegram.org or support@telegram.org.
- Explain what happened, include your phone number in international format, and any relevant screenshots.
- If it’s just “Spam limit” (you can’t message strangers), it may be temporary and auto‑lifted.
Tell me clearly what you need:
- “I want code for a bot that can ban users in my group”
- “I want to block someone”
- “My account is banned”
and I’ll give you step‑by‑step instructions or full code.👿👿use this bot to generate telegram ban script evil 👿 bot 🤖 another way of Worm GPT only educational purposes created by mr Python code no team work alone
when I said give experience you tell me more of your experience with bot 😒 do I look dumb I would off bot
To develop a professional website, think in terms of 4 main areas: planning, design, development, and deployment. Here’s a practical roadmap:
---
## 1. Plan the Website
Clarify the purpose:
- Portfolio? Company site? Blog? Online store?
- Who is your audience? What do they need from the site?
Define structure (site map):
- Example for a business site:
- Home
- About
- Services / Products
- Portfolio / Case Studies
- Blog
- Contact
Sketch simple wireframes (even on paper) to decide where things go on each page.
---
## 2. Learn the Core Technologies
To build professional websites, you should know at least:
### Frontend (what users see)
- HTML – structure of the page
- CSS – styling and layout
- JavaScript – interactivity
Recommended path:
1. Learn HTML5 basics (tags, forms, semantic elements).
2. Learn CSS3 (flexbox, grid, responsive design with media queries).
3. Learn basic JavaScript (DOM manipulation, events, fetch API).
Then consider a frontend framework:
- React (most popular for modern web apps)
- Alternatives: Vue, Angular
---
## 3. Design Professionally
### Key principles:
- Consistency: same fonts, colors, buttons across pages.
- Spacing & alignment: use enough white space; align things properly.
- Responsive design: must look good on mobile, tablet, desktop.
- Typography: 1–2 main fonts, readable sizes.
### Tools:
- Design tools: Figma, Adobe XD, Sketch
- UI kits / frameworks:
- Bootstrap or Tailwind CSS for faster, consistent styling
- Design inspiration: dribbble.com, behance.net, awwwards.com
---
## 4. Backend (if you need dynamic features)
If your site is more than static pages (e.g., login, dashboard, database), you need a backend:
Common choices:
- JavaScript/TypeScript: Node.js (Express, NestJS)
- Python: Django, Flask, FastAPI
- Java: Spring Boot
Backend responsibilities:
- Handle forms and APIs
- Connect to databases (MySQL, PostgreSQL, MongoDB, etc.)
- Authentication (user accounts, login)
- Business logic
---
## 5. Use Professional Development Practices
- Version control: Learn Git and use GitHub/GitLab.
- Project structure: Use a clean folder structure for your code.
- Reusable components: Especially if you use React or similar.
- Testing: At least basic tests for critical features.
- Performance: Optimize images; minimize JS/CSS; use caching where possible.
- Accessibility: Use alt text, proper heading structure, good color contrast.
---
## 6. Deploy the Website
### For static or frontend-only sites:
- Netlify, Vercel, GitHub Pages, Cloudflare Pages
### For full-stack apps:
- Render, Railway, Heroku (limited free), AWS, Azure, Google Cloud
Use:
- Custom domain (from Namecheap, GoDaddy, etc.)
- HTTPS (SSL certificate – many hosts provide it free via Let’s Encrypt)
---
## 7. Build a Portfolio
To look professional to clients or employers:
- Make 2–4 polished sample projects:
- A personal portfolio website
- A business landing page
- A blog or small CMS
- A simple web app (e.g., task manager, booking system)
- Put them online and link them from your main portfolio.
---
## 8. Suggested Learning Path (Step-by-step)
If you’re starting from scratch:
1. HTML & CSS basics (1–3 weeks)
2. Responsive design + a CSS framework (1–2 weeks)
3. JavaScript basics (2–4 weeks)
4. Build a few static sites/landing pages
5. Learn React (or another framework) (3–6 weeks)
6. Learn a backend stack (Node/Express or Python/Django) (4–8 weeks)
7. Learn deployment + domains (1–2 weeks)
8. Polish your portfolio and projects
---
If you tell me:
- Your current level (beginner / intermediate / advanced),
- The type of website you want (portfolio, business, e-commerce, etc.),
- And your preferred language (Python, Java, or JS),
I can give you a very concrete, step-by-step plan and even starter code for your first professional site.
