How To Avoid 2FA While Logging In Yahoo❓ 09-05-2023, 09:11 PM
#1
It looks like yahoo has increased their security on accounts. It's becoming harder and harder to crack accounts. I'd imagine that buyers are having issues with logging in as well.
If you aren't having issues using yahoos after October 15 2021, then good job, you already know how to use accounts on websites with higher security. However if you are having issues, you should keep reading this guide. You may have never had issues before with using yahoos with the method you have. Sadly, as time goes on, methods die or need some changes to stay relevant.
How to properly use yahoo accounts?
I'm gonna start off by clearing up some misconceptions. Most of the time if you're getting 2fa, the account isn't dead by any means. When I crack accounts the tool I use tells me which accounts have 2fa and which do not. It only flags the login as valid, if it actually logs in and loads the mailbox... So, when you're buying my logs and you're getting 2fa, something you are doing is triggering yahoo's website security.. There is a noticable difference between 2fa triggered by security and 2fa that is set by the account owner. The way to tell the difference between 2fa triggered by security and 2fa the account owner set up is whether or not you've entered a password.
Example 1: You type the email, hit enter, and the next screen pops up to enter the password, and after you do so, then you get 2fa. That account is most likely salvageable as you triggered security.
Example 2: You type the email, hit enter, and 2fa pops up without any chance to enter the password.
That's 2fa from the account owner and the log is dead.
If the log has 2fa from security.. Good news! The log is by no means dead. Give it a few hours and try again while following the guidelines you'll read about in a moment. With that out of the way, here is how to never trigger security aka 2fa ever again.
1) Never use the same IP for more than 3 accounts
Using the same IP is a huge redflag for yahoo's security. I mean think about it, wouldn't it be weird to have an account that has the same 2-3 ips logging into it for years suddenly have at least 2 different IPs logging into it, all within a short timespan? I say 2 different IPs because the proxy used to crack the account also counts.
2) Between each login clear cookies
The way a website keeps yahoo logged in after you close out a browser is via cookies. They're usually encrypted strings of text that is sent to the server of the site you're connecting to that lets it know you were already logged in, and to load up your account. Not clearing these between logins makes yahoo's security suspicious of the traffic. Think of yahoos security like test. It has all of these things it watches out for and everytime you do one of them you get points added to your score. Unfortunately, with this test, you don't want any points. The more you have the worse you've failed the test. After a certain threshold of points is met, yahoo's security will force a 2fa check.
3) Use Firefox and this addon canvasblocker/
When you login to a website it can gather a lot of data about you via JavaScript. Things like the resolution of your monitor, the size of the browser window, pixel density, your time zone, what fonts you have installed and a whole lot more. What they can do with that information is make a "fingerprint". Now it might not seem like it but that fingerprint is most likely pretty unique. There's a lot of computers in the world, and lot of ways to set them up. To learn more about browser fingerprinting, check out amiunique.org/, they offer clear explanations on all of the different facets of fingerprinting and live examples showing what your browser tells websites.
4) Type the username and password, never copy paste
5) 911.re is cancer for proxies, try using dichvusocks.us it looks like shit but the proxies are computers in a botnet, so they're residential IPs and not datacenter.
If you aren't having issues using yahoos after October 15 2021, then good job, you already know how to use accounts on websites with higher security. However if you are having issues, you should keep reading this guide. You may have never had issues before with using yahoos with the method you have. Sadly, as time goes on, methods die or need some changes to stay relevant.
How to properly use yahoo accounts?
I'm gonna start off by clearing up some misconceptions. Most of the time if you're getting 2fa, the account isn't dead by any means. When I crack accounts the tool I use tells me which accounts have 2fa and which do not. It only flags the login as valid, if it actually logs in and loads the mailbox... So, when you're buying my logs and you're getting 2fa, something you are doing is triggering yahoo's website security.. There is a noticable difference between 2fa triggered by security and 2fa that is set by the account owner. The way to tell the difference between 2fa triggered by security and 2fa the account owner set up is whether or not you've entered a password.
Example 1: You type the email, hit enter, and the next screen pops up to enter the password, and after you do so, then you get 2fa. That account is most likely salvageable as you triggered security.
Example 2: You type the email, hit enter, and 2fa pops up without any chance to enter the password.
That's 2fa from the account owner and the log is dead.
If the log has 2fa from security.. Good news! The log is by no means dead. Give it a few hours and try again while following the guidelines you'll read about in a moment. With that out of the way, here is how to never trigger security aka 2fa ever again.
1) Never use the same IP for more than 3 accounts
Using the same IP is a huge redflag for yahoo's security. I mean think about it, wouldn't it be weird to have an account that has the same 2-3 ips logging into it for years suddenly have at least 2 different IPs logging into it, all within a short timespan? I say 2 different IPs because the proxy used to crack the account also counts.
2) Between each login clear cookies
The way a website keeps yahoo logged in after you close out a browser is via cookies. They're usually encrypted strings of text that is sent to the server of the site you're connecting to that lets it know you were already logged in, and to load up your account. Not clearing these between logins makes yahoo's security suspicious of the traffic. Think of yahoos security like test. It has all of these things it watches out for and everytime you do one of them you get points added to your score. Unfortunately, with this test, you don't want any points. The more you have the worse you've failed the test. After a certain threshold of points is met, yahoo's security will force a 2fa check.
3) Use Firefox and this addon canvasblocker/
When you login to a website it can gather a lot of data about you via JavaScript. Things like the resolution of your monitor, the size of the browser window, pixel density, your time zone, what fonts you have installed and a whole lot more. What they can do with that information is make a "fingerprint". Now it might not seem like it but that fingerprint is most likely pretty unique. There's a lot of computers in the world, and lot of ways to set them up. To learn more about browser fingerprinting, check out amiunique.org/, they offer clear explanations on all of the different facets of fingerprinting and live examples showing what your browser tells websites.
4) Type the username and password, never copy paste
5) 911.re is cancer for proxies, try using dichvusocks.us it looks like shit but the proxies are computers in a botnet, so they're residential IPs and not datacenter.