Plain-English definitions of the terms behind cloud phones, antidetect setups, and real-device social media management.
Account warming is the gradual process of establishing a new social account so platforms treat it as a trusted, real user.
An Android emulator is software that simulates an Android phone on a computer — convenient, but easy for platforms to detect.
An antidetect phone presents a clean, unique, and consistent device identity so each account looks like its own real user.
A cloud phone is a remotely hosted Android device that you control live from your browser, exactly as if you were holding it.
A device fingerprint is the combination of hardware, software, and network signals platforms use to recognize a specific device.
Multi-accounting is running multiple social media accounts in parallel, each kept cleanly separated so platforms treat them as distinct users.
A phone farm is a managed array of real physical phones used to run mobile apps and accounts at scale.
A US mobile IP is an address handed out by a real US cellular carrier, the most trusted kind of connection for mobile platforms.