Unspoof Unicode Text

Unspoof Unicode Text

Tool powered by iloveunicode.com

Convert Standard Text to Spoofed Homoglyphs Instantly

Content filters and keyword blockers rely on exact ASCII character matching. This tool acts as a bridge, re-encoding your text using **Unicode Homoglyphs** (lookalike characters from Cyrillic, Greek, or Arabic scripts) to create strings that look identical to humans but are invisible to standard bots.

Input Source
Standard Text
Output Target
Spoofed Unicode
Technique
Homoglyph Swap
Privacy
Client-Side

How to Spoof Text

  • 1
    Paste Your Data: Copy the text you wish to obfuscate into the input box above.
  • 2
    Auto-Process: Our algorithm automatically substitutes Latin characters (e.g., “a”, “e”, “o”) with visually identical characters from **Cyrillic** or **Greek** alphabets.
  • 3
    Copy & Export: Click the “Copy” button. Your text is now visually readable but digitally distinct from the original string.
🔧 Troubleshooting Tip: If the spoofed text appears as empty squares (□□□) on the destination platform, the platform likely does not support the specific **Unicode Block** (e.g., Cyrillic) used for the substitution.

Why Text Filters Fail

Computers do not “read” text; they match binary code points. A standard Latin “H” is code point `U+0048`. The Cyrillic “Н” looks identical but is code point `U+041D`. Automated systems searching for keywords using basic **String Matching** or **Regex** will fail to detect the keyword if even one character is swapped for a homoglyph.

Standard vs. Spoofed Text

Comparison Standard Text Unicode Text Spoofer
Visual Appearance Readable Readable (Identical)
Digital Signature Basic Latin (ASCII) Mixed Script (Cyrillic/Greek)
Filter Detection 100% Match 0% Match (Bypasses Filters)

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. What are Zero-Width Spaces?

This tool can insert **Zero-Width Spaces** (U+200B) between letters. These are invisible characters that break up the sequence of letters, causing text-matching algorithms to see “H[space]e[space]l[space]l[space]o” instead of “Hello,” while it looks continuous to the human eye.

Q. Can this spoofing be reversed?

Yes. Advanced systems that use **Unicode Normalization (NFKC)** can map homoglyphs back to their standard equivalents. However, many basic social media filters and keyword blockers do not perform this expensive normalization step.

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