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.

In the digital marketing landscape of 2010, Facebook was no longer just a college networking site—it was a gold rush. And like any gold rush, the real money wasn't always in the digging; it was in selling the shovels. Facebook Friend Adder - Blaster Pro 7.1.3 -2010- -GuruFuel

For the average user who bought it in November 2010? No. By the time you finished setting up proxies, Facebook had updated its algorithm. You lost your $147 and your personal profile. And like any gold rush, the real money

Users of Blaster Pro began waking up to "Account Disabled – Unusual Activity." Facebook required phone verification or photo identification of friends. Power users were losing hundreds of accounts. By the time you finished setting up proxies,

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.

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).

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.