No. These are all scams designed to steal your information or infect your devices with malware.
Facebook employs thousands of engineers to find and fix bugs. If a bypass loophole ever exists, Facebook patches it immediately. Legitimate Ways to View Private Profiles
If you have a trusted mutual contact, ask them to show you a specific post or photo. This is not hacking, it’s just human networking. (Note: Do not pressure anyone to violate their friend’s trust.)
But it goes deeper than just terms of service. In many jurisdictions, accessing someone's private data without authorization may violate:
The most low-effort scam simply generates fake HTML content. It shows you a dummy profile with generic names (e.g., “John Doe”) and stock photos. The site then claims the tool “works” but demands a credit card for “full access.” No real data is ever retrieved.