You try to log in.
The system stops you.
No password error.
No suspension notice.
Just one message:
“Access restricted due to unusual traffic.”
What “Unusual Traffic” Actually Means
- The system detected abnormal request volume
- Multiple rapid logins from one account
- Automated or bot-like activity patterns
- IP behavior that doesn’t match normal usage
This is a security trigger — not a punishment.
Common Triggers That Cause It
- Using automation tools or extensions
- Refreshing pages excessively fast
- Running scripts or scraping tools
- Multiple device logins at the same time
- Shared networks (office, VPN, proxy)
Even normal users can trigger this accidentally.
What Gets Restricted
- Login attempts
- Search or request actions
- Uploads or downloads
- API or automation access
Some services block access completely until traffic normalizes.
How Long the Restriction Lasts
- Minutes to several hours (temporary blocks)
- 24–72 hours for repeated triggers
- Longer if manual review is triggered
The system usually lifts the block automatically.
How to Fix It Faster
- Stop all automated tools or scripts
- Log out from all active sessions
- Switch to a stable home IP
- Disable VPN or proxy connections
- Wait before retrying login attempts
Unusual traffic blocks are temporary — but repeated triggers can escalate restrictions.