Skip to main content

Facebook Auto Liker | Termux

Many auto liker scripts require you to provide your Facebook login credentials, access tokens, or cookies. This practice poses serious security threats:

Some scripts require copying the document.cookie string from a logged-in browser session. This string contains your session IDs ( c_user and xs ). Pasting these into an open-source script sends your active login session directly to the script configuration files, exposing you to session hijacking. Critical Risks of Using Auto Likers

Even if an auto-liker "works" and the visible like count increases, that's often the only thing that changes. These likes typically come from bots or low-engagement users in random countries. They won't leave comments, share your post, or visit your profile. A page filled with fake likes looks weak when nobody returns for the next post, potentially harming your genuine reach. These likes can also disappear after Meta's platform cleanups.

Likes generated by automation are not genuine. They do not increase authentic reach or engagement, and they can make your profile look spammy to actual friends and followers. Alternatives to Auto Likers facebook auto liker termux

If everything is installed correctly, you can start the tool by typing:

: Advanced scripts use headless browsers to interact with Facebook’s mobile interface (mbasic.facebook.com) to save data and speed up execution within the Termux environment. Significant Security Risks

Automation is a violation of Facebook’s Community Standards, and Meta's AI detection is highly aggressive in 2026. Many auto liker scripts require you to provide

If you want to grow your audience and get more interactions on your posts without risking your account, use these legitimate strategies:

: Some Python-based scripts use Selenium to mimic human browsing behavior, logging into your account and clicking the "Like" button on your newsfeed or specific URLs.

Some scripts require Facebook cookies for authentication. Common methods include: Pasting these into an open-source script sends your

Using Termux to explore coding, scripting, and system environments is a brilliant way to build your technical skill set. However, applying these tools to bypass Facebook's security features for automatic liking is a high-risk activity that usually ends in compromised data or a banned account.

Many repositories hosted on GitHub claiming to be "working auto-likers" are actually trojan horses. Malicious developers embed hidden code inside obfuscated Python files ( .pyc ) or encrypted strings. When you run the script, it silently logs your Facebook credentials, cookies, and tokens, forwarding them to a remote server controlled by hackers. Data Privacy Violations

Being locked out until you upload identification.

Which language do you prefer to learn for automation scripts ( or JavaScript/Node.js )? Share public link