Search for "Pure autoclicker" in any forum or Telegram channel and you will find dozens of offers. Most of them are not what they claim to be. Here is how to tell the difference before you waste time or money — or compromise your account.
What you are actually buying from random sellers
Based on OnlyLike analysis of the third-party "Pure automation" market in 2025, the typical offer falls into one of three categories:
- Outdated scripts — Python or JavaScript snippets that call Pure's API using hardcoded parameters from 2022-2023. Pure has since updated its authentication and these scripts fail immediately or trigger instant bans
- Credential-harvesting tools — tools that ask for your Pure login or access token. The "automation" may or may not work, but the primary purpose is capturing your credentials for resale
- Inactive or placeholder software — payment is collected, a ZIP file is delivered, the "software" does nothing functional
Specific red flags to watch for
- Asks for your Pure password, email, or access token (visible in browser developer tools)
- Requires installing an APK or modified app — these carry a different APK signing certificate that Pure detects
- No verifiable reviews, no trial period, no transparent description of how it works
- Sold through anonymous Telegram accounts with no contact information
- Claims to work through a "proxy server" or "cloud infrastructure" — means your interactions are routed through a third party's servers, not your device
What a legitimate tool looks like
A legitimate Pure automation tool:
- Works as a browser extension — verifiable in your browser's extension manager
- Has a free trial period with no payment required upfront
- Never asks for your Pure password
- Has transparent documentation explaining how it functions
- Has verifiable user reviews from identifiable users
Read also: how to distinguish a safe Pure tool from fraud and Pure automation safety rules.