He was right, in a way. The algorithm noticed the sudden burst of activity. Facebook’s inscrutable AI decided that Leo’s post was "engaging." It began showing the post to real people.

April 2026 Word Count: ~2,200 words

But then, the notifications took a turn.

Leo typed back, fingers fumbling. It’s a glitch. Facebook is messing up.

Automation tools exist in a perpetual cat-and-mouse game with social media platforms. Facebook frequently updates its security protocols to block automated scripts. As a result, the Facebook likes feature on Zefoy is often labeled as "Updates" or "Soon," meaning the service is temporarily offline while developers attempt to bypass new security patches. Bot-Driven Engagement

Avoid third-party services that sell or generate Facebook likes (including sites like Zefoy-style offerings). They carry high risk and low long-term value. Invest instead in authentic content, engagement practices, and small targeted ads to grow a sustainable audience.

"The captcha loop is infinite. I spent 40 minutes doing captchas and got ZERO likes. Total scam."

Meta uses advanced machine learning models that analyze thousands of data points per second. They look for:

Ironically, using Zefoy can destroy your future organic reach. Facebook’s algorithm prioritizes content that generates genuine interaction—meaning real comments, authentic shares, and likes from active users. When your post receives 500 bot likes but zero comments or subsequent engagement, the algorithm interprets this as low-quality content. As a result, Facebook will show your future posts to even fewer of your real followers.