Incogniton
How Incogniton helps affiliate marketers manage multiple Facebook accounts
Most affiliate setups fail before any policy violation happens because Facebook can link accounts at the browser level, not just the IP level. Different proxies in the same browser can still share the same device fingerprint, which makes separate accounts look connected. VPNs do not solve that. To keep Facebook accounts isolated, you need separation at both the proxy layer and the browser identity layer.
This article covers how Incogniton solves the browser identity problem, how to set up accounts correctly using isolated profiles, and what changes when you scale past a handful of accounts.
How Incogniton handles browser identity
Incogniton gives every account its own isolated browser profile. Each one keeps its own cookies, storage, fingerprint settings, and browsing state. Instead of trying to run multiple Facebook accounts through one browser and hoping proxies will cover the gaps, you work from separate profiles that do not overlap.
The real advantage shows up over time. Reopen a profile next week, and it still looks like the same browser setup as before.
For affiliate marketers, that matters because Facebook does not evaluate an account based on one login. It looks at patterns across repeated sessions. When the browser identity keeps changing, the account can start to look unstable. When it stays steady, it has a better chance of building believable session history over time.
So the goal is not just to hide an IP or patch one weak point. It is to give each account its own setup and keep it stable every time you log back in.
Setting up Facebook accounts in Incogniton
The base rule is simple: one account, one profile, one proxy, one card. Ad networks can link accounts through shared payment methods the same way they link them through shared browser fingerprints.
FuncCards lets you issue a unique virtual card for each account, so the billing side stays separate too. Once that structure is in place, the rest of the setup becomes easier to manage without cross-account mistakes.
1. Create a separate browser profile for each account. Use a fresh profile for every Facebook account so cookies, storage, browsing history, and session data do not overlap with other accounts.
2. Connect the right proxy before logging in. Choose a proxy that matches the account’s target region and assign it directly to the profile, whether it comes from an external provider, Incogniton’s Proxy Shop, or built-in proxy options.
3. Add browsing activity before opening the ad account. A completely new profile with no history may look unnatural, so use Cookie Collector when needed to create activity inside the same isolated browser environment.
4. Warm up the account in the same profile before launching campaigns. Log in, browse, and use the platform gradually so each session builds on the same browser history instead of starting from a clean setup every time.
Scaling past a handful of accounts
That setup works well when you only have a few accounts in play. As things grow, the challenge shifts from simple setup to keeping everything organized. Once you are handling 10, 20, or more accounts, small mistakes get expensive fast. A misconfigured proxy or someone opening the wrong browser profile can connect accounts that were supposed to stay separate, leading to restricted ad accounts, wasted spend, and time lost rebuilding setups that were already working.
Automation
For affiliates using scripts, Incogniton supports Python and TypeScript SDKs to automate with Playwright, Puppeteer, and Selenium. That lets automated actions run inside the same isolated browser profiles you use manually. It is a practical way to automate parts of account setup or repeatable browsing tasks without giving up the separation that keeps accounts distinct.
Team access
For teams, the bigger issue is making sure the right person always opens the right setup. Incogniton supports up to 25 members with role-based access control, and profile data can sync through encrypted cloud storage across devices. That makes shared account work easier to manage and helps reduce one of the most common agency mistakes: linking accounts because someone logged into the wrong session.
Incogniton pricing
Incogniton’s free plan gives you 10 profiles for the first two months, then drops to 3 permanent free profiles. That is enough to test the full setup before committing. If you are running real volume, the Entrepreneur plan at $29.99 per month is the more realistic option, with 50 profiles and automation API access.
Final thoughts
If the problem starts at the browser layer, the fix has to start there too. That is what Incogniton gives you: a separate browser setup for each account, with its own history, storage, and identity. Add a dedicated FuncCards virtual card on top, and the billing side stays separate as well.
Ultimately, each account is isolated across the main layers ad networks use to connect them.