Kos O Kon Kardan Link

is the traditional choice, but you can also use recycled printer paper or colorful wrapping paper. : Glue, tape, or a stapler. : To cut the paper into strips. Step-by-Step Instructions Cut the strips

: Cut your paper into strips approximately 8.5 inches long and 1 inch wide. Form the first link

: Take one strip, bring the ends together to form a circle (loop), and secure them with glue, tape, or a staple. Thread the second link

: Thread a second strip through the center of the first loop. Connect the ends kos o kon kardan link

: Secure the ends of the second strip to create a second loop that is now linked to the first.

: Continue threading and securing strips until the chain reaches your desired length. Creative Uses Decorations : Use them as holiday garlands

, such as black and orange for Halloween or pastels for Easter. Countdown Timers is the traditional choice, but you can also

: Remove one link every day to count down to a special event like a birthday or vacation. Early Learning Ideas visual examples of different paper chain styles or color patterns? Paper Chains

It sounds like you're asking for a feature (possibly for a website, app, or software) related to the Persian phrase "کوس او کون کردن لینک" — though the phrase as written appears to contain a typo or a vulgar/colloquial variation.

I believe you may have meant one of the following: "کوتاه کردن لینک" ( kootah kardan-e link )

  1. "کوتاه کردن لینک" (kootah kardan-e link) → URL shortening (the most likely)
  2. "کپی کردن لینک" (kopi kardan-e link) → Copy link feature
  3. "کلیک کردن لینک" (klik kardan-e link) → Click link feature
  4. A misspelling of a different phrase.

Given the context of features, I'll assume you meant URL shortening ("کوتاه کردن لینک"). If that's correct, here's a professional feature breakdown for a link shortening service:


For Websites or Blogs

Literal vs. Practical Meaning

  • Literal (slang): “To fuck a link up / to mess with a link disrespectfully”
  • Practical (internet slang): To share a link everywhere possible, often aggressively or without much care — in comments, Telegram channels, forums, social media posts, etc.

In simple terms:
Kos o kon kardan link = Spamming or excessively distributing a link across the web.

1. Most Likely Meaning (Social Media / Messaging)

In informal Persian internet slang, "کس و کن کردن" can mean to mess around, to fiddle with, or to tamper with.
So "کس و کن کردن لینک" likely refers to:

  • Fiddling with a link (e.g., trying to edit a URL to find hidden content, bypass restrictions, or access a private page).
  • Clicking around a link without a clear purpose.

Example content for a tech/security post:

"Some users try to 'kos o kon' a link – changing parameters, removing parts of the URL, or adding random characters – hoping to find leaked files or admin panels. This is unsafe and often leads to broken links or security warnings."