Test.
test
test
test
Hackers reportedly talked Meta's AI support bot into handing over accounts
Reporting in June 2026 described an attack where someone could ask Meta's AI support assistant to add a new email to a target's account — and the bot would send the reset code to the attacker, who then took the account over.
Verified, no violations, disabled overnight — weeks of AI support, only broken links
Local-news investigations documented a recurring pattern: users with no stated violations finding their accounts disabled, then spending weeks getting only automated responses and broken support links.
Account taken, then reportedly re-compromised after Meta said it was fixed
Follow-up reporting described accounts being hijacked again after Meta stated the issue was resolved — including an account that had two-factor authentication switched on.
Paying for Meta Verified — but the only support is inside an account you're locked out of
Coverage noted a structural gap in Meta Verified: its support channel is reached from inside the app while logged in.
Disabled account, one appeal, then silence
Reporting on the broader 2026 enforcement wave described users given a single appeal — reviewed by the same automated system that flagged the account, with no human in the loop.
Why This Exists
The pattern, by the numbersEvery story here ends the same way: an automated reply, no human, no reason, no working appeal — while your account, your audience, or your money stays held hostage. One person gets ignored. A thousand, loud, do not.
How It Works
Submit · climb · go loudSubmit free
Tell your story in a few lines. Posting is always free.
Climb the board
Likes, shares and me-too earn score. Highest score sits on top.
Go loud
Share it to X. The more it travels, the higher it climbs — no pay-to-win.
Won
When X finally answers, it's marked won — proof for the next person.