Browse a categorized list of message-flooding scripts across SMS, email, WhatsApp, Twitter, and Instagram
Check which linked scripts are currently reported as working or broken
Find temporary phone numbers for one-time SMS verification codes
Use as a reference index pointing to external GitHub projects rather than a standalone tool
| bhattsameer/bombers | yangwohenmai/lstm | charlesq34/pointnet2 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | 3,646 | 3,646 | 3,647 |
| Language | Python | Python | Python |
| Setup difficulty | moderate | moderate | hard |
| Complexity | 2/5 | 3/5 | 5/5 |
| Audience | general | data | researcher |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
Using these scripts to message people without consent is illegal harassment in many jurisdictions.
This repository is a collection of scripts that send large volumes of messages to a target phone number or email address. The idea is that by firing dozens or hundreds of automated messages in rapid succession, the recipient's inbox or messaging app becomes flooded. The scripts are written in Python and rely on third-party messaging services as the delivery mechanism. The collection is organized into several categories: SMS bombers, email bombers, WhatsApp bombers, Twitter bombers, and Instagram bombers. Each entry in the collection is a separate project, often written by a different author, and the README tracks whether each script is currently working, broken, or untested. As of the README, a handful of the SMS and email scripts are marked as working while others are noted as needing updates. A secondary section covers fake SMS utilities. These are tools that provide temporary phone numbers, allowing a user to receive a one-time verification code without revealing their real number. This bypasses SMS-based identity checks on websites that require phone verification during signup. The repository is a reference index rather than a single unified tool. It links out to many external GitHub projects and consolidates them in one place for easy browsing. Contributors and status labels are noted inline so a reader can quickly see which tools are still functional. It is worth being aware that using these scripts to send unwanted messages to real people without their consent is considered harassment and is illegal in many countries. The fake-SMS section can also run into legal or terms-of-service issues depending on the platform being accessed. The README does not include usage instructions for most tools beyond linking to their original repositories.
A reference index of scripts that send high volumes of automated messages to a phone number or email address.
Mainly Python. The stack also includes Python.
The README does not state a license.
Setup difficulty is rated moderate, with roughly 30min to a first successful run.
Mainly general.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
Verify against the repo before relying on details.