LuxAccs – Profitable rental of agency accounts regardless of the vertical

Storm in Facebook/Google: how teams survive with agency accounts and deep competitor analysis

Every arbitrage specialist and team lead knows this feeling: you wake up, open your antidetect browser, and see scorched earth. Another moderation “storm” in Facebook or Google has wiped out dozens of social accounts, spend limits on the surviving ad accounts have dropped to a ridiculous $25, and instead of buying traffic, your buyers are stuck in endless routine — linking cards, passing selfies, and going through verifications.

When the advertising giants tighten the screws, classic setups based on mass self-registered accounts, auto-regs, or purchased logs turn into a black hole for your budget. You spend money on expendables that die before they even pass moderation.

But while solo players panic and leave the niche, large systematic teams keep spending profitably. Their secret is not “secret buttons,” but a clear combination of the two pillars of modern media buying: trusted infrastructure (agency accounts) and smart competitor analysis through spy services. Let’s break down how to rebuild your team’s workflow to survive any storm.

Anatomy of a storm: why “the old way” no longer works

The era when you could buy a batch of auto-regs for a dollar, uniquify a creative in a free Telegram bot, and launch a broad campaign is gone for good. Today, Facebook Ads and Google Ads moderation algorithms are driven by advanced artificial intelligence trained to detect arbitrage behavior patterns.

  • Neural networks see the digital footprint: AI instantly links together accounts launched from similar proxies, using the same payment methods, or leading to similar subdomains. One account goes down - and the whole setup collapses in a chain reaction.
  • The death of micro-spends: launching campaigns with a $50 daily budget per account no longer pays off the team’s time costs. Farming, proxy purchases, and expendables consume more resources than a live account can bring in before the first “check.”
Main conclusion: in harsh storm conditions, the one who survives is the one who mimics a large legitimate business. Ad networks value players who spend big, steadily, and do not create millions of fake profiles.
Follow us on Telegram to stay up-to-date with the latest updates

Agency accounts as body armor for media buying

When the sea of self-registered accounts gets stormy, agency ad accounts become the спасение. These are profiles opened through official partners of Facebook, Google, TikTok, or Yandex. In practice, you rent an ad account from a company that has a direct contract with the ad network.

Comparative analysis of expendables during ban periods

Survival economics

At first glance, paying an agency commission (usually from 3% to 10% of spend) may seem expensive. But if you calculate the real costs a team bears during a storm — hundreds of burned accounts, expensive residential proxies, endless bills for quality cards, and buyers’ working time — an agency setup turns out to be far more cost-effective. The buyer focuses on optimizing the funnel instead of routine “button-clicking” in antidetect tools.

Important: to work with agencies, your offers and approaches must pass the provider’s initial screening. You will not be allowed to run outright blackhat offers here, but for White/Grey verticals (e-commerce, gambling through apps, finance, nutra) this is an ideal tool.
Get an account
Start working today in new, secure accounts, forgetting about bans and restrictions.
Leave your contact information, and a manager will contact you to provide an account or a consultation on our service

Spy services during a storm: not to copy, but to analyze

The second critical mistake buyers make during a storm is using spy services incorrectly (for example, Spy.House).

The trap of blind copying: you open a spy tool, see a nice creative running for a competitor, download it, uniquify it through a bot, and launch it on your expensive agency account. The result is an instant ban for “Circumventing systems” or “Suspicious software.” Why? Because moderation already knows that creative inside out.

Deep competitor analysis (Reverse Engineering)

In a storm, a spy service is needed not for theft, but for analytics. Your task is to understand why this ad survives.

  1. Filter by lifespan: look for ads that have been running for more than 5–7 days. If an ad survives that long during a storm, it means the advertiser has found a loophole in moderation.
  2. Funnel analysis: click the ad. Where does it lead? Study the pre-landing and landing page. Pay attention to how the visual part is structured: whether stop-words are used, how promises of fast earnings or weight loss are veiled, and what type of cloaking/protection is used.

Uniquification 2.0

If you like the approach, the creative must be rebuilt completely:
  • Metadata cleanup: completely remove the original EXIF data from the file.
  • Hash and structure changes: don’t just add a filter. Change the video duration, mirror it horizontally, alter the color palette, and add new elements (for example, AI-generated labels or overlays).
  • Text rework: bots are excellent at reading text in images and videos. Use synonyms, change fonts, and rephrase the offer so the meaning stays the same while trigger words for the AI moderator disappear.

We are often asked

It is a tool that finds and shows ads, creatives, and landing pages used by your competitors.

Synergy: a step-by-step team survival algorithm during a storm

How do you combine these tools into a single resilient system? Here is a step-by-step algorithm for media buying teams:

[Step 1. Deep spying] ➔ [Step 2. Adaptation and Uniquification] ➔ [Step 3. Approval with the Agency] ➔ [Step 4. Careful Launch and Scaling]

Step 1. Research in the spy service

The analytics team or top buyers identify new competitor approaches. For example, during Facebook storms, creatives using AI-generated avatars or news-style angles (mimicking well-known media) often “break through” because moderation initially trusts them more.

Step 2. Infrastructure preparation and “whitening”

Landing pages are developed. The pages are adapted to agency provider requirements: Privacy Policy, Terms of Use, and real contact details are added. Scripts are cleaned of suspicious code.

Step 3. Launching on an agency account

You fund the agency balance and distribute the funds across ad accounts. The launch starts with moderate budgets. Even on a trusted account, you should not immediately set a $2000 daily spend on a new ad set — let the algorithm get used to your asset and domain within the first 24–48 hours.

Step 4. Ban management

If you get a micro-ban (Policy), you do not panic. You message your agency manager. In 80% of cases, manual moderation by agency representatives removes the ad network’s automated ban within a few hours. If a “permanent” ban happens with no right to appeal, the agency simply transfers your unused balance to a new clean ad account within minutes. Your working capital is not frozen.
Follow us on Telegram to stay up-to-date with the latest updates

Conclusion

A storm in Facebook or Google is not the death of traffic arbitrage. It is a natural evolutionary filter. It washes solo buyers working by old schemes on cheap expendables out of the market and frees up the auction for those who are ready to play big.

Switching to agency accounts combined with intelligent use of spy services is the only working model for preserving and scaling team revenue. Invest in reliable infrastructure and deep analytics today, and you will meet the next storm not in panic, but with growing ROI.
Get an account
Start working today in new, secure accounts, forgetting about bans and restrictions.
Leave your contact information, and a manager will contact you to provide an account or a consultation on our service