Facebook Friend Adder - Blaster Pro 7.1.3 -2010- -gurufuel Online

A revolutionary tool, ethically bankrupt, technologically brilliant, and legally doomed. The blaster has been silenced, but its strategy echoes in every automated DM you receive today. Have a memory of using the original Blaster Pro? Share your story in the comments (or add us as a friend—if you dare).

Facebook moved from simple text CAPTCHAs to reCAPTCHA. Local solvers ("Sniper") failed, and third-party solving services became too slow.

With one click, the bot would send friend requests to scraped profiles in randomized intervals (3 to 8 seconds) to mimic human behavior. Version 7.1.3 boasted a "Smart Delay 2.0" algorithm designed to avoid the dreaded "You are sending too many requests" block. Facebook Friend Adder - Blaster Pro 7.1.3 -2010- -GuruFuel

LinkedIn automation tools (LinkedHelper, Expandi) and Instagram DM blasters are the direct descendants of Blaster Pro 7.1.3. They use the same principles: proxy rotation, randomized delays, and action limits.

Among the most infamous, controversial, and sought-after shovels was a piece of software that promised to automate the human connection itself: , distributed by the legendary (and now defunct) vendor network, GuruFuel . Share your story in the comments (or add

Published: Retrospective Tech Analysis Era: The Wild West of Social Media (2008–2012)

Marketers realized that blasting friend requests yielded low-quality "Stranger traffic." The 2010 method died, giving rise to the 2015 method of "Value-based friending" (commenting on posts before adding). With one click, the bot would send friend

This was the killer feature of 7.1.3. Facebook would ban IP addresses that sent 200+ requests per hour. So, Blaster Pro came bundled with a proxy scraper that pulled public proxies from 20 different sources and tested their latency. You could rotate IPs every 10 minutes.