Yesterday, everything worked.
I could post, comment, and use every feature.
Today, I logged in —
and something felt off immediately.
It looked normal — until nothing actually worked.
Nothing was clearly broken.
But nothing really worked either.
And in some cases, access can be limited
even while the account remains active.
In some cases, you may still be charged even when your account access is limited.
What Changed Overnight
This doesn’t usually happen because of one action.
It builds quietly.
Small things stack up over time —
until the system decides to step in.
You don’t see that buildup.
Only the result.
The Pattern the System Actually Sees
From your side, everything feels normal.
From the system’s side, it looks different.
Repeated signals matter more than single events.
A few posts flagged.
Some activity that doesn’t look typical.
Individually, nothing serious.
Together, enough to trigger limits.
Why the Account Still Looks “Fine”
This is where confusion starts.
You can still log in.
Your account is still there.
But the way it behaves has changed.
Actions don’t complete.
Responses feel delayed or blocked.
The system didn’t remove access.
It reduced it.
What Happens Behind the Scenes
These restrictions are not always manual.
They’re often triggered automatically,
based on accumulated behavior patterns.
Once activated, they don’t reset immediately.
Even if nothing new happens,
the limitation can remain for a while.
What You Should Do Next
Trying to push through usually doesn’t help.
Instead, step back.
Give the system time to stabilize.
Then return gradually,
without repeating the same actions.
This isn’t about one mistake — it’s about what repeated enough to be noticed.