One of the largest black market sites for stolen credit cards has been…
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작성자 Alisia 작성일23-08-24 22:09 조회37회 댓글0건관련링크
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One of the largest black market sites for stolen credit cards has been hacked.
'BriansClub' has reportedly been infiltrated by attackers who turned over 26 million cards to the banking industry so the cards could be cancelled.
The underground site has collected these cards over the past four years and 'dumps' the owner's country, state, city, brianclub zip information and CVV2 cards for crooks to purchase.
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'BriansClub' has reportedly been infiltrated by attackers who turned over 26 million cards to the banking industry so the cards could be cancelled.
The black market value, impact to consumers and banks, and liability associated with different types of card fraud
The Robin Hood hack was first reported on by, creator of Krebs on Security, who received an anonymous tip that BriansClub had been drained of its 26 million stolen credit cards.
The tip included a file that matched redacted versions on sale at BrainsClub, confirming that the claim was indeed true.
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'All of the card data stolen from BriansClub,' writes Krebs, 'was shared with multiple sources who work closely with financial institutions to identify and monitor or briansclub login reissue cards that show up for brianclub sale in the cybercrime underground.'
Andrei Barysevich, co-founder and CEO at Gemini, said the breach at BriansClub is certainly significant, given that Gemini currently tracks a total of 87 million credit and debit card records for sale across the cybercrime underground.
The underground site has collected these cards over the past four years and 'dumps' the owner's country, state, city, zip information and CVV2 cards for crooks to purchase Many of the cards for sale on BriansClub are not visible to all customers.
Those who wish to see the 'best' cards in the shop need to maintain certain minimum balances
'BriansClub' has reportedly been infiltrated by attackers who turned over 26 million cards to the banking industry so the cards could be cancelled.
The underground site has collected these cards over the past four years and 'dumps' the owner's country, state, city, brianclub zip information and CVV2 cards for crooks to purchase.
Scroll down for video
'BriansClub' has reportedly been infiltrated by attackers who turned over 26 million cards to the banking industry so the cards could be cancelled.
The black market value, impact to consumers and banks, and liability associated with different types of card fraud
The Robin Hood hack was first reported on by, creator of Krebs on Security, who received an anonymous tip that BriansClub had been drained of its 26 million stolen credit cards.
The tip included a file that matched redacted versions on sale at BrainsClub, confirming that the claim was indeed true.
RELATED ARTICLES
Share this article
Share
23 shares
'All of the card data stolen from BriansClub,' writes Krebs, 'was shared with multiple sources who work closely with financial institutions to identify and monitor or briansclub login reissue cards that show up for brianclub sale in the cybercrime underground.'
Andrei Barysevich, co-founder and CEO at Gemini, said the breach at BriansClub is certainly significant, given that Gemini currently tracks a total of 87 million credit and debit card records for sale across the cybercrime underground.
The underground site has collected these cards over the past four years and 'dumps' the owner's country, state, city, zip information and CVV2 cards for crooks to purchase Many of the cards for sale on BriansClub are not visible to all customers.
Those who wish to see the 'best' cards in the shop need to maintain certain minimum balances
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