Furthermore, the "email wall" is being replaced by the "paywall," which no shared password can breach.
Here’s a full review of — a concept tied to the now-defunct BugMeNot service, which provided shared, anonymous login credentials for websites. facebook bugmenot
| Criteria | Score (1–10) | |----------|---------------| | | 1/10 (does not work) | | Safety | 2/10 (high scam/malware risk) | | Ease of use | 2/10 (hard to find any working credentials) | | Legality | 3/10 (ToS violation, potential legal gray area) | | Overall value | 1/10 (completely impractical for Facebook) | Furthermore, the "email wall" is being replaced by
View the page via "Cached" on Google or Bing. | Risk | Severity | |------|-----------| | (if
| Risk | Severity | |------|-----------| | (if you attempt logins from suspicious IPs) | Medium | | Malware/phishing – Many sites claiming “Facebook BugMeNot logins” are scams hosting keyloggers or fake login pages | High | | Legal/ToS violation – Accessing Facebook via shared credentials is unauthorized access under CFAA (US) and similar laws | Low but possible | | Data exposure – Any info you enter on a shared account (even accidentally) is visible to others | High | | Wasted time – 99.9% of attempts fail immediately | Certain |
Technically, . Facebook is officially barred from the standard BugMeNot system. This is because BugMeNot's policy is to block sites that fall into categories like "Community" (where users add content) or "Fraud Risk" (where accounts contain sensitive data like personal messages and friend lists).
was a website launched in 2003 that allowed users to post and retrieve shared, public login credentials (email/password) for various sites. The goal: bypass mandatory free registration on news, forum, or content sites.