How to Properly Set Up Your Social Media Profile and Get More Tasks?

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If you have already completed tasks in IPweb, you have probably noticed that many of them are related to social networks, where you will need to have an account in order to complete them correctly.
At the same time, many social networks strictly monitor the “cleanliness” their users' accounts, which can often lead to blocking. However, creating a new account usually does not solve the problem, as a new “empty” account is more likely to speed up the upcoming block than to postpone it. > Moreover, correctly filled out social media accounts are also important for our website — as we understand that you take a responsible approach to completing tasks, and we will provide you with even more tasks of the appropriate types.

In this article, we have examined in detail how to correctly fill out a social media account to prevent it from being blocked and increase your earnings on our tasks. The main principle is that your social media account should look and behave like a normal, real person. If you build such an “authentic” account and act carefully, the risk of being banned drops sharply, and your earnings grow.

Basics

Features of different social networks

What to do if you've been blocked

Additional tips

Summary

#1 Basics

1.1. Realistic profile

Social networks have long learned to distinguish “real” people from “bots.” Therefore, simply creating an empty account and going to complete tasks is a direct path to being blocked.

What you must do:

  • Fill out your profile:
  • first and last name (can be fake, but must look plausible);
  • city, age, brief biography (“I work in IT,” “I enjoy movies and games,” etc.);
  • several interests/links, if the social network allows it.
  • Set a normal avatar:
  • do not leave the default avatar;
  • it is better to use a regular photo of a person (clear, without an obvious ” stock“ look);
  • Do not place IPweb or other service logos.
  • Link contacts:
  • verified email;
  • phone number, if the social network requires or strongly recommends it (especially important for Telegram, VK, Instagram, TikTok).
  • Check that the profile does not look like a new “service” account:
  • fill out the questionnaire, send a few posts, subscribe to something – all this should be done before actively completing tasks.

Goal: when a moderator visits a profile, they should see a typical user, not an empty ”placeholder."

1.2. Login that is not associated with IPweb

One of the simplest but often overlooked points is choosing a username.

What to avoid:

  • Logins containing the words “ipweb”, “ipwb”, ‘ip_web’, “ip-web” and similar variations.
  • Obviously “bot” names like ‘user123456789’ or “testaccount2025”.
  • Names with lots of numbers at the end (this indicates “robotic” behavior raquo;).
  • Names that suggest that this is an account for working through our service.

The right choice:

  • A normal nickname, like a normal person would have: “johnjersey,” “nicky.1995,” “evan_gamer,” etc.
  • You can use your real initials and year of birth.
  • The main thing is that the nickname looks natural, like that of a person who just decided to create an account on a social network.

This is very important and often ignored.

Dangerous behavior:

  • Link to IPweb in “About me” or in main contacts.
  • Mention the service in your profile description.
  • Link in the account header or in a post (especially relevant for Instagram, VK, TikTok).

Why it's dangerous:

  • Social networks see that many accounts point to the same service.
  • This is a clear sign that the accounts are being used to perform tasks rather than for normal communication.
  • Algorithms and moderators easily track this and begin to check such profiles more strictly.

The first rule of the club: don't mention IPweb in your profile. Your “legend” is that you are an ordinary person who lives their life and does not use their account for paid actions (subscriptions, reposts, likes, comments, views).

1.4. The account should not look like a “one-day wonder.”

One of the main flags for anti-spam filters is a new account that immediately starts performing actions en masse.

What indicates a ” one-day wonder»:

  • The account was registered yesterday, and today it already has 50 subscribers and 100 likes.
  • Empty profile (0 posts, 0 subscriptions, only required fields filled in).
  • Avatar, but no other data.
  • Mass actions begin immediately after registration.

How to avoid this status:

  • Create an account and wait a few days before actively completing tasks (3-7 days ideally).
  • During these days, create several posts, subscribe to thematic accounts, show initial “live” and “normal human” activity.
  • You can spread this out over a week: a day to fill out your profile, a day or two to add posts, a day or two to subscribe.
  • Only after that should you start actively completing IPweb tasks from this account.

Result: the account looks ”alive," not like a “dummy” created a minute ago.

1.5. About natural activity

As we wrote earlier, one of the most common mistakes is when a person creates an account, leaves it empty, and immediately starts completing tasks – subscribing, liking, commenting in batches. For algorithms, this is a red flag.

Warm up your account:

  • Publish 3-10 posts:
  • about yourself, your work, hobbies, movies, games;
  • It is better to spread it out over time (for example, 1-2 posts per day, rather than posting everything in 5 minutes). .
  • Add a few friends/subscriptions:
  • follow a few real friends, bloggers, brands;
  • The main thing is to make your subscription list look natural: don't just follow advertising pages or pages of the same type.
  • Give us some likes:
  • scroll through the feed, give 10-20 likes to different posts;
  • you can leave a couple of simple comments such as “great idea,” “useful video,” etc.

Take some time for this, preferably at least a few days. After such a “warm-up,” , the social network will perceive you as a regular user, not as a “bot” that appeared solely for the sake of clicks.

1.6. Don't do the same actions over and over again

This is a very important point, which in practice “kills” most accounts.

Bad behavior model:

  • 200 subscriptions in a row.
  • 100 likes in 10 minutes.
  • Only comments and no other actions.
  • Works only in one network and only for one type of task.

This behavior almost always looks suspicious:

  • algorithms see a pattern and high density of actions;
  • if many similar accounts behave in the same way, the risk of being banned increases.

Correct model:

  • Alternate between different types of actions:
  • like – subscribe – scroll through the feed – pause for a couple of seconds – like again – comment – pause again;
  • Mix social networks:
  • Today: a few actions on VK and YouTube;
  • tomorrow: Instagram + Telegram;
  • the day after tomorrow: LinkedIn + TikTok + Reddit (if you use them) .
  • Do not perform dozens of identical actions in a row on one network:
  • it is much safer to perform 10-20 different actions than 100 identical ones.

In short: the more your activity resembles normal human behavior, the better. Our smart algorithm will always give you different tasks on different social networks so that your social activity is and looks as diverse as possible. Try not to skip tasks, don't “choose your favorite tasks,” but do all the tasks we offer you.

1.7. Limits on the number of actions

Social networks impose limits on the number of actions per unit of time (subscriptions, likes, comments, messages). They do not disclose the exact figures, but there are practical safety rules:

  • For new accounts:
  • It is better not to take any massive actions during the first 7-14 days;
  • limit your tasks to 30 actions per day on each social network.
  • «Mature» accounts (1+ month of active use):
  • you can gradually increase the load;
  • Avoid sudden jumps anyway: 10 actions today, 200 tomorrow – that's bad.

General rule: it's better to work regularly and little by little than to ” squeeze the maximum out of the evening" and then get banned.

1.8. One account – one person, a healthy “legend”

Ideally, you should use your personal social media profile for assignments, but if this is not possible, you need to come up with a persona for yourself raquo; in this profile.

Example of a “legend”:

  • I live in name of your hometown, I work in IT/marketing;
  • I love movies, games, technology;
  • Sometimes I subscribe to new channels, watch videos, and read articles.

Apply this legend to your actions:

  • subscribe to thematic accounts according to your interests;
  • Don't like everything in a row: less is better, but logically.

If you create multiple accounts on different social networks, it's a good idea to make sure they don't look like copies of each other (same avatars, texts, descriptions) – this also increases the risk.

Important: if your account has been blocked, analyze the errors

If your account has been restricted or blocked, this is a sign that something has gone wrong. After restoring your account (or creating a new profile), be sure to take note of the mistakes you made.

First of all, completely change your behavior strategy on social media; don't act the way you did before. To be more specific:

  • too fast and monotonous activity → slow down, alternate types of actions;
  • too many actions on a single network → distribute the load across multiple sites;
  • The profile looked like a one-day thing → fill it out differently, in more detail;
  • many comments with the same text → write varied comments, do not copy the same thing;

Changing your behavior is key. If you repeat the same thing that led to the block, the second account will most likely also quickly “die.” Therefore, always analyze what the mistake was and correct it.

Below are brief practical recommendations for key platforms. These tips can often be used with other social networks as well.

2.1. X.com (formerly Twitter)

Link your Twitter account to IPweb to continue receiving these tasks.

X.com (Twitter) has fairly strict algorithms for combating bots and suspicious activity, but it also provides the opportunity for recovery through appeals.

Recommendations:

  • Profile:
     
    • Be sure to add an avatar and header image (profile header);
    • fill in your biography – a few words about yourself, your interests;
    • link your email and phone number (the phone number is especially important for recovery);
    • post a few of your tweets before you start working on the tasks.
       
  • What to avoid:
     
    • mass subscriptions in a short period of time (especially dangerous for new accounts);
    • identical replies/comments under multiple posts;
    • likes hundreds of tweets in a row without pauses;
    • aggressive behavior: arguments, insults, provocations.
       
  • How to act safely:
     
    • subscribe to a maximum of 10-20 accounts per day (less for new profiles);
    • like with 20-60 second pauses between actions;
    • write comments with different content, do not copy and paste the same text;
    • Post your tweets or retweets regularly – this shows you are active;
    • read the feed, respond to posts based on your interests, not just assignments.
       
  • If you have been restricted/suspended:
     
    • don't panic – X.com often allows you to restore your account;
    • complete verification: this usually involves a CAPTCHA + phone or email confirmation;
    • Submit an appeal via the Support form, calmly explaining the situation;
    • In many cases, the account is restored within 24-48 hours.
       
  • Features of new accounts:
     
    • During the first 1-2 weeks, X.com pays particular attention to user behavior.
    • limit your activity: no more than 10–15 subscriptions and 20– 30 likes per day;
    • gradually increase the load after the account has “matured”.

Important: X.com is one of the few services where the appeal system actually works. Therefore, if you have received a restriction, don't rush to delete your account or create a new one. First, try to restore your current account through support.

2.2. LinkedIn

LinkedIn is particularly sensitive to “fakes” and suspicious activity.

Recommendations:

  • Required:
  • fill in your profile: position, company (can be fictitious, but plausible), skills;
  • add a business-style photo;
  • List a few skills and interests.
  • Don't do:
  • sending hundreds of friend requests in a row;
  • similar views/subscriptions in a short period of time;
  • mass messages to strangers with template phrases.
  • Do:
  • add 5-10 contacts per day, not 50;
  • read the feed, respond to posts, comment on the matter;
  • complete tasks on LinkedIn in between your own activities, rather than “working through the list one by one”.
2.3. YouTube

YouTube monitors unusual likes, subscriptions, and comments.

Recommendations:

  • Set up your profile:
  • add an avatar and channel name;
  • you can specify a short description.
  • Activity:
  • watch videos outside of our assignments;
  • like not only the assignments, but also things that interest you;
  • Do not spam identical comments under different videos.
  • Limits:
  • do not subscribe to dozens of channels in a row in a couple of minutes;
  • it is better to write comments with short pauses, 30-120 seconds between different videos.
2.4. Instagram

Instagram is aggressively fighting mass following and unnatural activity.

Recommendations:

  • Profile:
  • avatar photo;
  • 3–9 posts in the feed (simple photos/screenshots are fine, the main thing is that they are realistic);
  • a few stories from time to time – greatly increases trust.
  • What to avoid:
  • subscribing in large batches (especially on new accounts);
  • identical short comments (”cool," “🔥🔥🔥”) under dozens of posts in a row;
  • constant activity only on assignments and no personal activity.
  • How to proceed:
  • combine: subscribe, view stories, like, scroll through the feed, one or two comments;
  • take breaks, don't click non-stop;
  • Do not use the same comment text multiple times.
2.5. Telegram

The main problem with Telegram is suspicious mass joinings of channels and chats, as well as violations of the rules of specific communities.

Recommendations:

  • Profile:
  • set your name and avatar;
  • link your phone number;
  • Occasionally change your status/description to appear active.
  • Activity:
  • join channels gradually, not ten in a row per minute;
  • Do not spam chat rooms with identical messages.
  • if the task requires an introduction, stay in the channel for a while; do not leave immediately after completing the task.
  • Security:
  • do not click on suspicious links from unknown channels;
  • Do not send your personal data to strangers.
2.6. VK

VK has quite strict anti-spam filters, especially for new accounts.

Recommendations:

  • Profile:
  • photo, some information about yourself (city, school/university, interests);
  • a few posts on the wall – music, videos, reposts.
  • Activity:
  • Do not add everyone to your friends list;
  • do not send the same message to a large number of people;
  • likes and subscriptions – in small portions, with pauses.
  • Groups:
  • join different communities: music, movies, technology;
  • Sometimes be active outside of assignments: like a meme, comment to a friend, etc.
TikTok is particularly sensitive to sudden spikes in activity and repetitive actions.

Recommendations:

  • Profile:
  • avatar photo;
  • brief description, a couple of your videos (they can be simple, even without showing your face, but they should be “lively”).
  • Activity:
  • watch the feed, don't just do the tasks;
  • do not post a hundred likes in a row in 5 minutes;
  • subscriptions and comments – with pauses and in mixed mode.
  • Legend:
  • Behave like a regular user: browse “Recommendations,” check out trends, and occasionally post something yourself.
2.8. Reddit

Reddit is vigilant about new accounts and quickly removes spam.

Recommendations:

  • Profile:
  • choose a username that does not resemble a “bot” (no “user123456789”);
  • Add an avatar (you can use the default one, but it's better to customize it slightly).
  • Activity:
  • Don't rush to leave comments everywhere;
  • First, subscribe to a few subreddits that interest you;
  • read posts, sometimes vote for them.
  • Comments:
  • write about the matter at hand, not repetitive messages;
  • Do not insert identical phrases under different posts – this is easily tracked.

#3 What to do if something goes wrong
Blocking or restrictions are not the end of the world. Often, you can ”get your account back" if you act calmly and carefully.

3.1. Never rush to register a new account right away

A common mistake: a person receives a restriction and immediately registers a new profile, sometimes using the same email address, the same device, and the same pattern of behavior. As a result, the new account is blocked, and sometimes the entire “range.”

The right steps:

  1. Read the social network notification carefully:
  2. what exactly they restricted;
  3. what actions are suggested for recovery.
  4. Complete all suggested checks:
  5. captcha;
  6. confirmation of phone number;
  7. email confirmation;
  8. sometimes – document loading (in rare cases, more often in LinkedIn/META Services).
  9. Submit an appeal:
  10. Almost everywhere there is a form “Appeal”, ‘Support’, " Submit a request»;
  11. Write calmly and politely: you are a regular user, you do not understand what the violation is, ask for clarification and removal of the restriction.

Example: in X.com (Twitter) often, it is enough to pass verification (captcha, phone confirmation), and the account returns to normal operation.

3.2. How to write an appeal correctly

Short and to the point:

  • do not confess to something you did not do;
  • do not write that you “complete tasks” or “work through services”;
  • do not mention IPweb;
  • emphasize that you are a regular user and may have mistakenly subscribed/liked too actively.

Example of neutral text:

«Hello! My account has been restricted. Perhaps I was too active in subscribing/liking, but I don't use any prohibited programs. Please explain what I did wrong and help me restore my account to normal operation."

After sending the appeal, you have to wait for a response. During this time, you should not create new accounts on this social network – it is better not to touch the account at all or use it as little as possible.

3.3. Report the problem to IPweb

If you are experiencing problems with your account (restrictions, blocking, strange notifications):

  • don't stay silent;
  • contact IPweb support and describe the situation:
  • which social network;
  • what you did before that;
  • what message/restriction you received.

This helps:

  • understand if there is a widespread problem affecting other users;
  • adjust tasks or recommendations;
  • advise you on how to proceed.

#4 Additional tips for maximum security

4.1. Keep an eye on your device and IP address

Sometimes suspicious activity is caused not only by behavior on social media, but also by technical details.

Recommendations:

  • Do not constantly jump between a dozen different IPs in a short period of time for the same account.
  • Avoid working simultaneously from different devices on the same network for a single profile.
  • Do not explicitly use ” dirty" IP addresses (from which spam/abuse has already been detected) if you are aware of them.

With normal use via one or two stable devices and regular networks (home Internet, mobile), everything is usually fine. span>

4.2. Do not violate the site rules

Even the most perfect “legend” won't save you if you grossly violate the rules of the social network itself:

  • do not write offensive comments;
  • do not post prohibited content (violence, extremism, fraud);
  • Do not participate in blatantly gray/black schemes.

Tasks in IPweb are not designed to violate the rules and do not imply this. If a task seems strange or risky to you, it is better to report it using the “Report” button button and skip it using the button of the same name.

4.3. Work with accounts for the long term

The best way to earn a stable income through IPweb is to treat accounts as assets:

  • don't abandon your account as soon as you've completed a few tasks;
  • develop it: posts, subscriptions, participation in discussions;
  • The older and more “active” your account is, the less chance there is of it being suddenly blocked and the more tasks we will assign to you.

#5 Brief summary

To simplify all recommendations into a few key rules:

1) Fill out your account “as a real person” – photo, data, a few posts and subscriptions. Choose a natural username without mentioning IPweb or similar words.
2) Before completing tasks, create natural activity: likes, views, a couple of comments from yourself. Do not post links to IPweb in profiles. span>
3) Don't do the same thing hundreds of times in a row, don't get stuck on one social network – alternate between platforms and types of activities.
4) Take breaks, don't try to “squeeze the most” out of one evening - this is a direct path to limitations.
5) If something goes wrong, first try to restore your account and file an appeal. Analyze the errors and take them into account in your next account.
6) If you have any problems with your account, write to IPweb support; don't try to silently “rebuild” everything from scratch.

If you behave like a normal user and IPweb tasks are only part of your overall activity, the risk of being blocked will be minimal, and your accounts will live long and steadily generate income.

IPweb

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