DrexCorman
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Mastering and succeeding in carding isn't based on buying guides/methods, but rather on knowledge, effort, and time.
In addition to luck, skills, or even insider information (for example, when working in a team). For instance, you can research vulnerable websites with weak payment gateways and hundreds of other potential vulnerabilities.
Any website with some type of payment gateway can be used for carding. Some can be simple, like buying games or gift cards...
It all depends on an anti-fraud system, in which monopolistic companies invest thousands/millions of dollars.
These are different websites that offer different services and target different customers, but they all have something in common.
Before reading... To answer and explain this problem, try to think and use common sense.
You don't pay through a payment gateway, but rather link a card to your account and use that card to make the payment.
Each method has its own limitations, pros, and cons.
+ You can use VBV/MSC/Amex cards, etc.
- Beginner users may have their orders canceled and accounts blocked without knowing the reason for the error.
These are warning signs.
Let me explain why this mechanism is more complicated and why you don't know where you went wrong (and that's the problem when you're not sure where you went wrong).
- Your settings/proxy (must be perfect).
- You must have a residential IP, as changing internet providers (i.e., changing SOCKS5/proxy) can flag the new account (something different is using LTE/4GB, where the IP changes every hour), but not DSL.
- Never use services that provide a single phone number, such as VoIP.
Now, the problem with this information I mentioned is that you can create an account, for example, with a VoIP number, but you may receive something like a shadowban/red alert, etc.
So, try to understand and imagine: you prepare the bill, it takes a few days, but they flag it, and you don't know about it.
The anti-fraud system is improving every year, so here's a perfect/common example:
When you manipulate the browser/fake something, usually due to a lack of IT knowledge, it causes errors in the canvas and WebGL that don't match (example).
JavaScript provides functions and brings the website to life, but you probably don't know everything it does behind the scenes.
Basically, JavaScript knows everything: screen resolution, time zone, language, your RAM, how many CPU cores, WebGL (basically your GPU), canvas, etc.
But it's more sophisticated than you think: JavaScript can detect how fast you move your mouse, how fast you click/scroll the page, and how long you spend on the site (to read about a product, for example).
Analyze your behavior
It's common to find companies that analyze data and share it to create a standard profile of new customers and their behaviors.
Let's be honest, many newcomers behave like robots: they visit the site and complete the purchase in less than a minute.
But this is not common for customers who have never visited the site before (this only works for sites you visit for the first time and for online stores with no purchase history).
But if you are a frequent customer and have already made some successful payments, this example does not apply.
There are some typical behavioral factors of a common customer visiting a website for the first time:
- A new customer always checks some products, adds or removes them from the cart (personally, I recommend doing this for a few minutes or half an hour, without making purchases. Then, create an account on the online store and leave it there for a day).
- Make sure to use the same IP and the same device when logging in again (as this can be detected).
AND ALWAYS CLEAN YOUR TRACKS!
In addition to luck, skills, or even insider information (for example, when working in a team). For instance, you can research vulnerable websites with weak payment gateways and hundreds of other potential vulnerabilities.
Any website with some type of payment gateway can be used for carding. Some can be simple, like buying games or gift cards...
It all depends on an anti-fraud system, in which monopolistic companies invest thousands/millions of dollars.
These are different websites that offer different services and target different customers, but they all have something in common.
Before reading... To answer and explain this problem, try to think and use common sense.
You don't pay through a payment gateway, but rather link a card to your account and use that card to make the payment.
Each method has its own limitations, pros, and cons.
+ You can use VBV/MSC/Amex cards, etc.
- Beginner users may have their orders canceled and accounts blocked without knowing the reason for the error.
These are warning signs.
Let me explain why this mechanism is more complicated and why you don't know where you went wrong (and that's the problem when you're not sure where you went wrong).
- Your settings/proxy (must be perfect).
- You must have a residential IP, as changing internet providers (i.e., changing SOCKS5/proxy) can flag the new account (something different is using LTE/4GB, where the IP changes every hour), but not DSL.
- Never use services that provide a single phone number, such as VoIP.
Now, the problem with this information I mentioned is that you can create an account, for example, with a VoIP number, but you may receive something like a shadowban/red alert, etc.
So, try to understand and imagine: you prepare the bill, it takes a few days, but they flag it, and you don't know about it.
The anti-fraud system is improving every year, so here's a perfect/common example:
When you manipulate the browser/fake something, usually due to a lack of IT knowledge, it causes errors in the canvas and WebGL that don't match (example).
JavaScript provides functions and brings the website to life, but you probably don't know everything it does behind the scenes.
Basically, JavaScript knows everything: screen resolution, time zone, language, your RAM, how many CPU cores, WebGL (basically your GPU), canvas, etc.
But it's more sophisticated than you think: JavaScript can detect how fast you move your mouse, how fast you click/scroll the page, and how long you spend on the site (to read about a product, for example).
Analyze your behavior
It's common to find companies that analyze data and share it to create a standard profile of new customers and their behaviors.
Let's be honest, many newcomers behave like robots: they visit the site and complete the purchase in less than a minute.
But this is not common for customers who have never visited the site before (this only works for sites you visit for the first time and for online stores with no purchase history).
But if you are a frequent customer and have already made some successful payments, this example does not apply.
There are some typical behavioral factors of a common customer visiting a website for the first time:
- A new customer always checks some products, adds or removes them from the cart (personally, I recommend doing this for a few minutes or half an hour, without making purchases. Then, create an account on the online store and leave it there for a day).
- Make sure to use the same IP and the same device when logging in again (as this can be detected).
AND ALWAYS CLEAN YOUR TRACKS!