socialscan offers accurate and fast checks for email address and username usage on online platforms.
Given an email address or username, socialscan returns whether it is available, taken or invalid on online platforms.
Features that differentiate socialscan from similar tools (e.g. knowem.com, Namechk, and Sherlock):
-
100% accuracy: socialscan's query method eliminates the false positives and negatives that often occur in similar tools, ensuring that results are always accurate.
-
Speed: socialscan uses asyncio along with aiohttp to conduct all queries concurrently, providing fast searches even with bulk queries involving hundreds of usernames and email addresses. On a test computer with average specs and Internet speed, 100 queries were executed in ~4 seconds.
-
Library / CLI: socialscan can be executed through a CLI, or imported as a Python library to be used with existing code.
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Email support: socialscan supports queries for both email addresses and usernames.
The following platforms are currently supported:
Username | ||
---|---|---|
✔️ | ✔️ | |
✔️ | ✔️ | |
GitHub | ✔️ | ✔️ |
Tumblr | ✔️ | ✔️ |
Lastfm | ✔️ | ✔️ |
Snapchat | ✔️ | |
GitLab | ✔️ | |
✔️ | ||
Yahoo | ✔️ | |
✔️ | ||
Firefox | ✔️ |
Other similar tools check username availability by requesting the profile page of the username in question and based on information like the HTTP status code or error text on the requested page, determine whether a username is already taken. This is a naive approach that fails in the following cases:
-
Reserved keywords: Most platforms have a set of keywords that they don't allow to be used in usernames
(A simple test: try checking reserved words like 'admin' or 'home' or 'root' and see if other services mark them as available) -
Deleted/banned accounts: Deleted/banned account usernames tend to be unavailable even though the profile pages might not exist
Therefore, these tools tend to come up with false positives and negatives. This method of checking is also dependent on platforms having web-based profile pages and cannot be extended to email addresses.
socialscan aims to plug these gaps by directly querying the registration servers of the platforms instead, retrieving the appropriate CSRF tokens, headers, and cookies.
> pip install socialscan
> git clone https://github.com/iojw/socialscan.git
> cd socialscan
> pip install .
usage: socialscan [list of usernames/email addresses to check]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--platforms [platform [platform ...]], -p [platform [platform ...]]
list of platforms to query (default: all platforms)
--view-by {platform,query}
view results sorted by platform or by query (default:
query)
--available-only, -a only print usernames/email addresses that are
available and not in use
--cache-tokens, -c cache tokens for platforms requiring more than one
HTTP request (Snapchat, GitHub, Instagram. Lastfm &
Tumblr), reducing total number of requests sent
--input input.txt, -i input.txt
file containg list of queries to execute
--proxy-list proxy_list.txt
file containing list of HTTP proxy servers to execute
queries with
--verbose, -v show query responses as they are received
--show-urls display profile URLs for usernames on supported platforms
(profiles may not exist if usernames are reserved or belong to deleted/banned accounts)
--json json.txt output results in JSON format to the specified file
--version show program's version number and exit
socialscan can also be imported into existing code and used as a library.
v1.0.0 introduces the async method execute_queries
and the corresponding synchronous wrapper sync_execute_queries
that takes a list of queries and optional list of platforms and proxies, executing all queries concurrently. The method then returns a list of results in the same order.
from socialscan.util import Platforms, sync_execute_queries
queries = ["username1", "email2@gmail.com", "mail42@me.com"]
platforms = [Platforms.GITHUB, Platforms.LASTFM]
results = sync_execute_queries(queries, platforms)
for result in results:
print(f"{result.query} on {result.platform}: {result.message} (Success: {result.success}, Valid: {result.valid}, Available: {result.available})")
Output:
username1 on GitHub: Username is already taken (Success: True, Valid: True, Available: False)
username1 on Lastfm: Sorry, this username isn't available. (Success: True, Valid: True, Available: False)
email2@gmail.com on GitHub: Available (Success: True, Valid: True, Available: True)
email2@gmail.com on Lastfm: Sorry, that email address is already registered to another account. (Success: True, Valid: True, Available: False)
mail42@me.com on GitHub: Available (Success: True, Valid: True, Available: True)
mail42@me.com on Lastfm: Looking good! (Success: True, Valid: True, Available: True)
For bulk queries with the --input
option, place one username/email on each line in the .txt file:
username1
email2@mail.com
username3
If you find this tool useful and would like to support its continued development, you can donate here. Thank you for your support.
BTC: bc1qwrnukyc6xh9aygu5ps2geh8stmvagsj5u4v7j6
ETH: 0x45a0F91666391078eA521A6123559E49DAb1275f
Errors, suggestions or want a site added? Submit an issue.
PRs are always welcome 🙂
Please ensure that the code is formatted with black
using the config in pyproject.toml
before submitting a PR.
MPL 2.0