Any one Suguest me good cc Shop

darkloop

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all brother any one can tell me about this shop anyone use and suguest me good or not

robinshop vc
jacksparrow cc
moneycounter cc
bigstash io
scorpion cc
vortiga cc
 
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Characteristic features of the specified stores:
- Lack of necessary BINs for certain services.
- Lack of necessary NON-VBV/AUTO-VBV BINs.
- Low quality of the offered material. Many invalid cards.
- Duplicates of the same cards offered in different stores (duplicates are sold to several hands).
- Expensive range of illiquid cards.
- Lack of a good automatic card checker.
- Poor policy for returning invalid cards.
- Negative reviews about the store's support service.

P.S. The circumstances presented in general are not found in every store.
Before buying, study the reviews of other carders about the experience of buying cards in their advertising topics.
You can buy material from them at your own risk.

Good, reliable and proven card stores can be found in this section: "Sell CC, Dumps, Checkers, Bins".
 
any one know this shop link and suggest me good cc shop

Screenshot 2025-08-07 002900.png
 
I could suggest some good cc source
But it’s up to your choice
You can contact me on telegram here @vi_ttore
 

What is Carding? A Step-by-Step Overview​

Carding refers to the process of obtaining and using stolen credit card details to commit fraud, typically online or in-person. It's part of the broader cybercrime ecosystem where hackers steal data en masse (e.g., via data breaches, skimmers, or malware) and sell it on underground marketplaces. These "CC shops" (credit card shops) act as illicit e-commerce platforms for fraudsters.

Here's how carding typically works, broken down into steps for educational clarity:
  1. Data Acquisition: Criminals steal credit card information through methods like:
    • Installing skimmers on ATMs or point-of-sale (POS) terminals to capture magnetic stripe data (dumps).
    • Hacking e-commerce sites or using keyloggers to grab card details during online transactions.
    • Phishing emails or fake websites that trick users into entering their info.
    • Large-scale data breaches (e.g., from retailers like Target or Home Depot in past incidents).
  2. Packaging and Selling the Data: Stolen data is bundled into formats like CVVs, dumps, or fullz and sold on dark web forums, Telegram channels, or dedicated CC shops. Prices range from $2-5 for basic CVVs to $20+ for high-value dumps with PINs. Shops like those in the screenshot advertise "fresh" data with high "validity rates" (e.g., 80-90% success, meaning the cards haven't been canceled yet).
  3. Verification and Use by Buyers:
    • Buyers test the data on low-risk sites (e.g., small donations or gift card purchases) to check if the card is active.
    • If valid, they "card" items: Buy high-value goods (electronics, gift cards) shipped to drop addresses (abandoned houses or reshipping mules) or use for digital services.
    • Tools like VPNs (to hide IP addresses) and RDPs (remote access to compromised computers) help maintain anonymity.
  4. Monetization and Laundering:
    • Fraudulent purchases are resold on platforms like eBay or pawn shops.
    • Profits are laundered via cryptocurrency (e.g., Bitcoin mixers) or prepaid cards.
    • Sellers in CC shops often take a cut (e.g., the "good percentage" mentioned in the screenshot for "first-hand" data providers).
  5. Detection and Shutdown: Banks use AI to flag unusual activity (e.g., multiple small tests or geographic mismatches). Shops get raided, as seen with sites like Rescator.la, which was linked to major breaches.

The screenshot you shared appears to be from a typical CC shop interface, possibly on the dark web or a private forum. It targets "serious" sellers of CVVs/dumps, offers refunds under specific conditions, and boasts high success rates to attract buyers. No exact match for this shop was found in public searches, suggesting it might be obscure, new, or a scam itself—many such sites rip off buyers with invalid data.

Key Terms from the Screenshot and Carding Context​

To understand the screenshot, here's a breakdown of common terms in carding, presented in a table for clarity:

TermDefinitionRole in CardingExample from Screenshot
CVVCard Verification Value: A 3-4 digit code on the back of credit/debit cards (e.g., Visa/Mastercard use 3 digits).Used for online (card-not-present) transactions to verify possession of the card. Merchants aren't allowed to store it post-authorization."Errors in CC numbers and CVVs" – Shops sell these for $2-5 each, claiming 80-90% are active.
DumpsRaw data from a card's magnetic stripe, including track 1/2 info (name, number, expiration). Often includes CVV1 (encoded version).Allows cloning physical cards for in-person use (e.g., at ATMs or stores). More valuable than CVVs ($10-50+)."SERIOUS CVV SELLERS OR DUMPS" – Invites providers of stolen dumps; "dumps with pin" are premium for ATM cash-outs.
Fullz"Full information": Card details plus personal info (name, address, SSN, DOB, mother's maiden name).Enables identity theft, account takeovers, or high-limit fraud. Priced $20-100+.Not directly mentioned, but implied in "highly sensitive materials sourced directly from stores."
RDPsRemote Desktop Protocols: Stolen access credentials to remote computers/servers.Used for anonymity—fraudsters log in to compromised machines to perform carding without tracing back to themselves."RDPs, VPNs, SelfRegister Accounts (you can refund within 03 hrs)" – Sold for $5-20 to hide activities.
VPNsVirtual Private Networks: Services that mask your IP address and encrypt traffic.Essential for evading detection during purchases or shop access. Often come with "paid memberships.""ALL VPNs come with paid membership... if they not work... you get replaced/refunded" – Bundled to promote safe fraud.
Self-Register AccountsPre-made or stolen accounts on platforms (e.g., email, social media) that allow quick sign-ups without verification.Used for creating fake buyer profiles or mules for shipping.Refundable within 3 hours if invalid.
Success Range/ValidityPercentage of stolen cards that are still active (not canceled by victims/banks).Shops hype 80-90% to lure buyers; reality is lower due to rapid detection."Falling within the 80/90% success range" – A marketing claim; actual rates drop quickly as cards are reported stolen.
Verification ProcessTesting cards for activity without full purchase (e.g., small authorizations).Buyers "populate" (test) cards; shops monitor abuse to prevent mass invalidations."No account restriction for verifying multiple cards... balance may be reset to zero if abused."

These terms highlight how shops operate like legitimate businesses but deal in stolen goods. The screenshot's refund policy (e.g., no refunds for CC/CVV errors) is common to limit losses from "dead" (invalid) data.

How CC Shops Operate: Behind the Scenes​

CC shops like the one in the screenshot mimic legitimate e-commerce:
  • User Interface: Simple dashboards (e.g., "Admin, Total Sales, Funds, Chat") for buying/selling data. Users like "Top1" log in to browse inventory.
  • Payment Methods: Crypto (Bitcoin, Monero) for anonymity; shops take commissions (e.g., "good percentage" for sellers).
  • Quality Claims: "Sourced directly from stores with thorough inspection" means data from fresh breaches or skimmers, not resold scraps.
  • Risk Management: Limited refunds, monitoring for abuse (e.g., over-testing cards leads to bans), and bundled tools (VPNs/RDPs) to help buyers succeed.
  • Ecosystem: Connected to forums like those on Reddit (e.g., dark web subs discuss shops but warn of scams) or X (formerly Twitter), where users share "legit" sites. Searches revealed sites like Carder007.tv or Savastan0.cc as examples, but they're often shut down or fraudulent.

From research, shops like Rescator.la (exposed in 2014 for selling breach data) show how they profit: Bulk uploads of millions of cards, sold cheap but in volume. However, 70-80% of data becomes invalid within days due to bank alerts.
 
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