Dekachiin5 had a long run. I got banned a few days ago for some post I wrote shitting on trannies.
I only got a 10 day ban, actually. But I wrote an appeal that said the admins are all a bunch of trannies, (I was burned out on reddit anyway) which really pissed them off so they permabanned my account twice, and then when I made a new one following the basic rules of changing IP and restarting my browser in private mode, they still hit the new account. I don't believe they can do this using their ordinary processes, but when they get really angry, they can manually do it. I have noticed that there are periods of time where I stir the tranny admins up and they hound me very aggressively for a week or two banning accounts until they think I've gone away, then I'll be able to make a new account after that and post for months and months with no problems. I make it a lot easier for them since my usernames are all the same name but with the number at the end changed.
Anyway, reddit is a libtard shithole, and pretty much every sub is flooded specifically with pro-Democrat anti-Republican propaganda. Mark my words, by the end of this year, every single thread will have absolute screeching about DeSantis or whoever the leading Republican primary candidate is.
Twitter has noticeably improved since Musk took over in terms of becoming more moderate.
How do you think they linked your new account to the old one?
Probably a combination of having a very similar user name + a similar VPN IP (I kept the geographic region the same) + my not having a common firefox version (because I don't update).
Their automated system only uses cookies + IP address, so if you change VPN & restart browser to flush cookies, then the automated system leaves you alone.
But when they're really mad at me they probably set something up manually to flag new accounts based on common characteristics. However if I tried to put in more effort, I could probably beat it. Just by changing my usernames more and changing the browser entirely.
He's using firefox. He should be using Brave, which has way more anti-fingerprinting measures and looks like way more popular Chrome decreasing the usefulness of each fingerprint.
Also private mode will only work if you always use it, only use it for one account at a time, and restart between different uses. It's better to set up a browser/profile that you only use for ban evasion to always clear everything on exit and use it normally so there's no possibility of super cookies using local storage, cache, or anything else you didn't think of.