About carding training for %, what is it really

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How beginners are cheated on "free" training.

Hello everyone, the topic of the article will be about training in the field of carding, but we will not talk about simple training, such as WWH and so on, but about a special caste of trainers, whom I personally called "volunteers", because what they do is just some kind of embodiment of volunteer activity. Then you will understand everything. I will tell you who actually lures you with promises that you will be trained for a percentage, and you will give the profit later. We will talk about this kind of trainers, what benefit they get from you. I think this will be interesting to many.

Let's go. I think that most of you have seen these incredibly generous offers that have flooded Telegram and YouTube, which simply tempt with their simplicity and benefit beginners who want to learn carding, but do not want to pay for it. In all similar videos, where the authors are engaged in such volunteer activities, I often come across such videos in recommendations, where in the titles "I will train for free", "I will train for a percentage", the authors of such videos throw the same offer to their listeners. It sounds something like this from the video: "Do you want to earn 4 or 5 thousand dollars a month on stuff carding? Join my team. The training is free, you only pay a percentage of the profit. No catches, no secrets. I will show you how to do it. I will teach you to carding gifts, stuff. I will give you private software for work, and you only pay a percentage." I listen to this and think. There are still bright people, there are still some. Look at how great they are, I would shake their hand. Look how they help beginners. But I would suggest going further and renting an apartment for those who want to study for the duration of their studies, paying for their utilities, bringing food. When students get a declame when they are hits, rent them a massage therapist to quickly relieve stress. You have to do everything so that the person makes a profit, you generously took him into the team for this.

Now let's get serious. From the very beginning, people have been writing to me wanting to study for a percentage. I kept wondering. Where are the origins of this fashion? And meanwhile, more and more people like this were writing. I wanted to understand where the logic is, where so many people out of touch with reality come from. But then I realized that the problem is not in people, but in those who pollute the Internet with such offers.

And for a simple beginner it looks like if someone on the market offers something like that, like training for a percentage, well, it means it really exists, it means it exists. I remember the first time I came across a couple of such videos, where the authors very diligently lured in such training, which is supposedly there for a percentage, all in that spirit, I generally thought that these were bots, because when you go to their channel, literally all their videos are of this kind, that is, we will train you, go, that is, almost some kind of hypnosis, that is, the same videos, which are also re-uploaded to different channels, apparently, to cover more traffic, and only recently it dawned on me that this is a new wave of scam. Moreover, often in such videos, either some inarticulate young men with a low pitch broadcast and they broadcast clearly about things they have no idea about, that is, they have never come into contact with in life, maybe they saw films, I don’t know, or these videos just sound like a neural network and they think, look, they not only shoot charity videos, they also re-upload them, that is, to different channels, so that, well, apparently, to tell as many newbies as possible about such a wonderful opportunity to study for free. Apparently, all the money has already been earned from America, pulled out, it is possible to slowly engage in charity, they are doing everything right, as a kind of leisure they apparently have such that we have already earned all the money, let others also earn, why are they worse, right? This is such a clown show, friends.

Do you want to know what the trick is with such trainings? If you want, I will tell you. And it's all outrageously simple, friends, anyone, without exception, who offers you such a wonderful opportunity as training for a percentage, is a petty swindler who simply lures you into a seemingly free course in order to take money from you for consumables. Yes, yes, friends. Let's consolidate once again. Absolutely any person who offers you to join some team, to learn there how to carding all sorts of goods, with him there will definitely be a moment when you get to him, when they will convince you to buy consumables under any pretext. You will be stripped of $100-200 and sent on a long journey.

Well, forewarned means forearmed, friends. Such an epidemic has flooded Telegram and YouTube. I understand perfectly well that a sucker is a sucker even in Africa. But aren't these obvious things for many, that free cheese can be found, you know, only where? I'm honestly surprised why so many people fall for this.

And they even write to me, teach there for a percentage. You guys, well, put two and two together, here's what someone writes. What kind of world do you live in? This is utter nonsense. What does it matter? A person wants to be shipped goods there for free, and he's like, bro, when business takes off, when they trade, I'll give you 90% of the profit, just give me the opportunity.

And here you are, ladies and gentlemen, and opportunities. Opportunity number one. A person asks for help in figuring out what a scam is. Have you guessed what it is? Let's move on? Let's go.

And here again the genius of the scammer is amazing. The genius decided not to stop at the fact that he sold the guy invalid material. He also decided to palm off a pack of proxies on him, because he says there are supposedly none individually. Just phenomenal, fool, I can't find other words. And it all started with him offering a job for a percentage. Unfortunately, these guys are screwing you like suckers.

Here a subscriber asks for help in figuring out what the catch is with the teacher-philanthropist who is inviting people to join Team, and here the catch has been discovered.

Here a subscriber wrote asking to evaluate what a scam is from the side of the trainer. He says he trains for 25% of the profit, in short, some kind of loaf, a really sweet option, a very generous person, you can read their correspondence or not waste your time on this. In fact, in general, some fool is pouring water between the lines, persuading you to buy consumables, yeah, trying to squeeze 3 kopecks out of my subscriber, but the subscriber himself is not a fool and he himself has a thought that this is some kind of nonsense, I am additionally admonishing him here. I hope it worked. As you can see, people in general are not fools, that is, they have, they are suspecting that this is some kind of nonsense, that is, free training. I hope that this is exactly how it is for most people.

In general, the summary is like this. If a person is not sick in the head, if everything is in order with the cuckoo, or if a person is not a philanthropist, then there is no trace of any training for a percentage. There is simply no such thing, it is a myth, with the purpose of swindling gullible newbies for consumables. What thoughts does all this make me think, I want to tell you in conclusion. There is such a wonderful forum WWH, and there are these clowns-protsichniks, yes, who scam in training for a percentage. What I thought, if people fall for them, that is, for a scam of this level, then for a scam of the WWH level with their training, why people fall for it, there are no questions at all. It seems to me that this will always flourish, especially with their promotions, with their reviews. Have you even seen their reviews? Go to their thread with training, read there "All millionaires". Well, there "All millionaires" or something like that. People there are doing well, everyone has already made a fortune on stuff carding. This is despite the fact that in the WWH training in their manual they still force work from a virtual machine. Well, don't you find it funny? People are not stopped at all by the fact that the leaks of WWH manuals over time show that WWH people simply re-upload the same file, in fact, let's say, training.pdf and at the end change the year to a new one, 2024 to 2025, etc. If you want, you can read their manual for 2024 on our forum for free. Read it yourself and see their incompetence.

I hope I warned those I could. I wish good luck and profits to those who think sensibly. Nothing will help the rest. See you!
 
How beginners are cheated on "free" training.

Hello everyone, the topic of the article will be about training in the field of carding, but we will not talk about simple training, such as WWH and so on, but about a special caste of trainers, whom I personally called "volunteers", because what they do is just some kind of embodiment of volunteer activity. Then you will understand everything. I will tell you who actually lures you with promises that you will be trained for a percentage, and you will give the profit later. We will talk about this kind of trainers, what benefit they get from you. I think this will be interesting to many.

Let's go. I think that most of you have seen these incredibly generous offers that have flooded Telegram and YouTube, which simply tempt with their simplicity and benefit beginners who want to learn carding, but do not want to pay for it. In all similar videos, where the authors are engaged in such volunteer activities, I often come across such videos in recommendations, where in the titles "I will train for free", "I will train for a percentage", the authors of such videos throw the same offer to their listeners. It sounds something like this from the video: "Do you want to earn 4 or 5 thousand dollars a month on stuff carding? Join my team. The training is free, you only pay a percentage of the profit. No catches, no secrets. I will show you how to do it. I will teach you to carding gifts, stuff. I will give you private software for work, and you only pay a percentage." I listen to this and think. There are still bright people, there are still some. Look at how great they are, I would shake their hand. Look how they help beginners. But I would suggest going further and renting an apartment for those who want to study for the duration of their studies, paying for their utilities, bringing food. When students get a declame when they are hits, rent them a massage therapist to quickly relieve stress. You have to do everything so that the person makes a profit, you generously took him into the team for this.

Now let's get serious. From the very beginning, people have been writing to me wanting to study for a percentage. I kept wondering. Where are the origins of this fashion? And meanwhile, more and more people like this were writing. I wanted to understand where the logic is, where so many people out of touch with reality come from. But then I realized that the problem is not in people, but in those who pollute the Internet with such offers.

And for a simple beginner it looks like if someone on the market offers something like that, like training for a percentage, well, it means it really exists, it means it exists. I remember the first time I came across a couple of such videos, where the authors very diligently lured in such training, which is supposedly there for a percentage, all in that spirit, I generally thought that these were bots, because when you go to their channel, literally all their videos are of this kind, that is, we will train you, go, that is, almost some kind of hypnosis, that is, the same videos, which are also re-uploaded to different channels, apparently, to cover more traffic, and only recently it dawned on me that this is a new wave of scam. Moreover, often in such videos, either some inarticulate young men with a low pitch broadcast and they broadcast clearly about things they have no idea about, that is, they have never come into contact with in life, maybe they saw films, I don’t know, or these videos just sound like a neural network and they think, look, they not only shoot charity videos, they also re-upload them, that is, to different channels, so that, well, apparently, to tell as many newbies as possible about such a wonderful opportunity to study for free. Apparently, all the money has already been earned from America, pulled out, it is possible to slowly engage in charity, they are doing everything right, as a kind of leisure they apparently have such that we have already earned all the money, let others also earn, why are they worse, right? This is such a clown show, friends.

Do you want to know what the trick is with such trainings? If you want, I will tell you. And it's all outrageously simple, friends, anyone, without exception, who offers you such a wonderful opportunity as training for a percentage, is a petty swindler who simply lures you into a seemingly free course in order to take money from you for consumables. Yes, yes, friends. Let's consolidate once again. Absolutely any person who offers you to join some team, to learn there how to carding all sorts of goods, with him there will definitely be a moment when you get to him, when they will convince you to buy consumables under any pretext. You will be stripped of $100-200 and sent on a long journey.

Well, forewarned means forearmed, friends. Such an epidemic has flooded Telegram and YouTube. I understand perfectly well that a sucker is a sucker even in Africa. But aren't these obvious things for many, that free cheese can be found, you know, only where? I'm honestly surprised why so many people fall for this.

And they even write to me, teach there for a percentage. You guys, well, put two and two together, here's what someone writes. What kind of world do you live in? This is utter nonsense. What does it matter? A person wants to be shipped goods there for free, and he's like, bro, when business takes off, when they trade, I'll give you 90% of the profit, just give me the opportunity.

And here you are, ladies and gentlemen, and opportunities. Opportunity number one. A person asks for help in figuring out what a scam is. Have you guessed what it is? Let's move on? Let's go.

And here again the genius of the scammer is amazing. The genius decided not to stop at the fact that he sold the guy invalid material. He also decided to palm off a pack of proxies on him, because he says there are supposedly none individually. Just phenomenal, fool, I can't find other words. And it all started with him offering a job for a percentage. Unfortunately, these guys are screwing you like suckers.

Here a subscriber asks for help in figuring out what the catch is with the teacher-philanthropist who is inviting people to join Team, and here the catch has been discovered.

Here a subscriber wrote asking to evaluate what a scam is from the side of the trainer. He says he trains for 25% of the profit, in short, some kind of loaf, a really sweet option, a very generous person, you can read their correspondence or not waste your time on this. In fact, in general, some fool is pouring water between the lines, persuading you to buy consumables, yeah, trying to squeeze 3 kopecks out of my subscriber, but the subscriber himself is not a fool and he himself has a thought that this is some kind of nonsense, I am additionally admonishing him here. I hope it worked. As you can see, people in general are not fools, that is, they have, they are suspecting that this is some kind of nonsense, that is, free training. I hope that this is exactly how it is for most people.

In general, the summary is like this. If a person is not sick in the head, if everything is in order with the cuckoo, or if a person is not a philanthropist, then there is no trace of any training for a percentage. There is simply no such thing, it is a myth, with the purpose of swindling gullible newbies for consumables. What thoughts does all this make me think, I want to tell you in conclusion. There is such a wonderful forum WWH, and there are these clowns-protsichniks, yes, who scam in training for a percentage. What I thought, if people fall for them, that is, for a scam of this level, then for a scam of the WWH level with their training, why people fall for it, there are no questions at all. It seems to me that this will always flourish, especially with their promotions, with their reviews. Have you even seen their reviews? Go to their thread with training, read there "All millionaires". Well, there "All millionaires" or something like that. People there are doing well, everyone has already made a fortune on stuff carding. This is despite the fact that in the WWH training in their manual they still force work from a virtual machine. Well, don't you find it funny? People are not stopped at all by the fact that the leaks of WWH manuals over time show that WWH people simply re-upload the same file, in fact, let's say, training.pdf and at the end change the year to a new one, 2024 to 2025, etc. If you want, you can read their manual for 2024 on our forum for free. Read it yourself and see their incompetence.

I hope I warned those I could. I wish good luck and profits to those who think sensibly. Nothing will help the rest. See you!
Hello sir , I've enjoyed reading through your piece here I'm a beginner here and it's all my pleasure to learn, work with you and share profits together ❤
 
Carding training "for a percentage" refers to scams where fraudsters offer free or low-cost training on carding — illegally using stolen credit card information to purchase goods or services — in exchange for a share of the supposed profits. These schemes target beginners, promising easy money through "stuff carding" (buying physical goods with stolen cards) and often claim to provide private software or insider knowledge. Below, I break down the scam and how beginners are deceived, based on the provided context and general knowledge.

What Is Carding Training "For a Percentage"?​

  • The Pitch: Scammers, often posing as experienced carders, advertise on platforms like Telegram and YouTube, offering to teach beginners how to card for free or a small fee, with the catch that they take a percentage (e.g., 25%) of the profits once the trainee succeeds.
  • The Reality: These trainers are not genuine mentors but fraudsters who lure victims with promises of easy wealth. Their goal is to extract money from beginners by selling them overpriced or useless "consumables" (e.g., invalid card details, proxies, or software) or other fake tools needed to start carding.
  • Tactics: They use persuasive marketing, like repetitive videos with buzzwords ("earn $4-5k a month," "join my team"), sometimes featuring inarticulate speakers or AI-generated content to flood channels and attract naive users. The offers sound altruistic, but the intent is to exploit.

How Beginners Are Cheated​

  1. False Promises of Free Training:
    • Beginners are drawn in by the idea of learning a lucrative skill without upfront costs. The "pay a percentage later" model seems risk-free, appealing to those eager to enter the illegal carding world.
    • In reality, no legitimate carder would train strangers for free or a future cut, as carding is high-risk, competitive, and requires trust. The promise is a bait to hook gullible newcomers.
  2. Upselling Consumables:
    • Once enrolled, trainees are pressured to buy "essential" tools—such as stolen card data, VPNs, proxies, or software—that are often invalid, overpriced, or publicly available for free.
    • Victims may pay $100–$200 for these items, only to find they don’t work or are irrelevant. The scammer then disappears, leaving the beginner with losses and no real training.
  3. Exploiting Trust and Inexperience:
    • Scammers rely on beginners’ lack of knowledge about carding. Newcomers may believe these offers are standard in the underground market, especially when they see polished videos or fake reviews claiming success.
    • Some scammers create multiple channels or re-upload identical content to appear credible and cast a wider net.
  4. No Real Training:
    • The "training" is often vague, outdated, or copied from free sources like forums (e.g., WWH manuals). For example, WWH training materials are criticized for being recycled year after year with minor changes (e.g., updating the year in the file name), yet sold as premium content.
    • Beginners may be instructed to use risky or ineffective methods, like working from virtual machines, which are outdated or easily detected by anti-fraud systems.
  5. Fake Reviews and Hype:
    • Scammers may fabricate testimonials or reviews, claiming their trainees became "millionaires" through carding. These are designed to build trust and pressure victims into joining.
    • Forums like WWH amplify this by hosting threads with exaggerated success stories, further misleading beginners.

Why Beginners Fall for It​

  • Desire for Quick Money: The promise of earning thousands monthly with minimal effort appeals to those unfamiliar with carding’s risks and complexities.
  • Perceived Legitimacy: Repetitive marketing across platforms creates an illusion that such offers are common and legitimate in the carding community.
  • Lack of Critical Thinking: Beginners may not question the logic of a stranger offering free training in a secretive, illegal field, especially when the pitch is framed as "charity" or mentorship.
  • Social Engineering: Scammers exploit psychological tactics, like urgency or fear of missing out, to push victims into buying consumables without due diligence.

Broader Context and Risks​

  • Carding’s Illegality: Carding is a form of cybercrime involving fraud and identity theft. Engaging in it risks legal consequences, including fines or imprisonment, depending on jurisdiction.
  • Scammer Ecosystem: The "training for percentage" scam is part of a broader trend of fraud within the carding community. Even established forums like WWH may sell outdated or ineffective guides, as noted in the text, capitalizing on beginners’ ignorance.
  • No Honor Among Thieves: The carding world is inherently untrustworthy. Legitimate carders rarely share profitable methods with outsiders, as it increases competition and risk of exposure.

How to Avoid These Scams​

  • Skepticism Is Key: If an offer sounds too good to be true (e.g., free training for a future cut), it’s almost certainly a scam. Legitimate carders don’t operate like charities.
  • Research Independently: Check forums or communities for reviews of trainers, but be wary of fake testimonials. Cross-reference information on platforms like Reddit or dark web forums, keeping in mind that even these can be manipulated.
  • Avoid Paying for Consumables: Never buy tools or data from someone offering free training, as these are the primary way scammers profit.
  • Learn the Risks: Understand that carding is illegal and high-risk. Instead of seeking shortcuts, consider legal ways to earn money, as carding scams often lead to financial loss and legal trouble.
  • Use Common Sense: As the text highlights, ask yourself why someone would invest time and resources to train strangers for free in a competitive, illegal field. The answer is they wouldn’t—unless they’re scamming.

Conclusion​

"Carding training for a percentage" is a deceptive scheme where scammers exploit beginners’ greed and inexperience, luring them with promises of free training only to sell worthless tools or data. The flood of such offers on Telegram and YouTube creates a false sense of legitimacy, but the reality is simple: these are petty fraudsters preying on the gullible. Beginners should approach such offers with extreme caution, recognize the illegality and risks of carding, and avoid falling for "free cheese" that always comes with a catch. For those seeking genuine opportunities, legal and ethical paths to income are far safer and more sustainable.
 
Your text is clearly a satirical, informative, and cautionary article aimed at exposing scams in the carding and fraud community , particularly targeting so-called "free training" or "training for a percentage" offers. You're essentially trying to warn beginners who are looking to get into carding (illegal financial fraud using stolen credit card information) that many so-called "trainers" or "mentors" are not offering anything of value — they're just trying to scam them out of small amounts of money under the guise of generosity.

Let’s break down what you're saying and clarify the key points for better understanding and structure.

🚫 What is "Carding Training for a Percentage"?​

This refers to scammers offering so-called carding tutorials or mentorship, often on platforms like Telegram, YouTube, or dark forums. They promise to teach beginners how to commit carding fraud in exchange for a percentage of the profits, instead of a direct fee. On the surface, this sounds appealing to newbies who don’t want to spend money upfront.

But in reality, there's no actual training, no real mentorship, and no profit. The scammer simply uses this bait to lure victims into paying for fake tools, proxies, or consumables (like stolen credit card info, fake IDs, etc.), which are either useless or nonexistent.

🧠 Why Do People Fall for This?​

  1. False Hope & Greed: Beginners are often desperate to make money quickly and are lured by the promise of easy profits.
  2. Misinformation: Many don’t understand the real risks or how carding actually works.
  3. Poor Critical Thinking: Scammers use persuasive language and often mimic real experts, making it hard for newbies to distinguish between real and fake.
  4. FOMO (Fear of Missing Out): Seeing others claim success (even if fake) pushes people to join in.

🧨 How the Scam Works​

  1. Luring Victims: Scammers post videos or messages saying they’ll train people for free or for a cut of future profits.
  2. False Promises: They promise access to tools, guides, or stolen data.
  3. Fake "Training": They may give generic or outdated info (like WWH guides), or nothing at all.
  4. Selling Useless Stuff: They pressure victims to buy “consumables” — proxies, stolen cards, fake IDs, etc. — for $100–$300.
  5. Ghosting: After the money is taken, the scammer disappears or blocks the victim.

🧨 Example of the Scam in Action​

Scammer:
“Join my team! I’ll train you for free, and you only pay 25% of your profits. I’ll give you access to private tools and stolen data.”

Victim:
“Okay, sounds good!”

Scammer:
“Great! First, buy this proxy list for $100 and this card database for $200.”

Victim:
Pays the money.

Scammer:
Disappears. The proxies don’t work, the cards are invalid, and the victim is out $300.

🧠 Why This is a Problem​

  • Misleading Beginners: People who are already inexperienced are being taken advantage of by predators.
  • Reputation Damage: These scams give the already-illegal carding world a worse reputation and make it harder for even experienced fraudsters to operate.
  • Promotion via Fake Reviews: Scammers often create fake success stories or manipulate forums (like WWH) to make their offers seem legitimate.

🧾 Your Key Message​

There is no such thing as “free carding training” or training “for a percentage.”
It’s all a scam designed to extract small sums of money from naive individuals who think they’re getting a mentor or a foot in the door.

📌 Final Thoughts​

You're essentially trying to educate the carding community, albeit from a cynical and humorous perspective, that there are no free lunches — especially not in the world of fraud. Your tone is sarcastic and mocking, which helps highlight the absurdity of the scam while also making it memorable.

✅ Summary​

CONCEPTEXPLANATION
Carding Training for %A scam where fraudsters promise to teach carding in exchange for a cut of future profits.
The ScamVictims are tricked into buying useless tools or stolen data, then ghosted.
Why It WorksNewbies are desperate, greedy, or uninformed.
Your MessageDon’t fall for it. There’s no such thing as free training in carding.

💡 Suggestions for Improving the Article​

  1. Add a Clear Structure: Use headings and bullet points to guide the reader.
  2. Tone Down the Slang: While it adds flavor, it can make the message harder to follow.
  3. Include Real Examples: Mention specific Telegram channels or YouTube videos if possible (without promoting them).
  4. Offer Alternatives: If someone is serious about learning carding (for educational purposes), suggest they learn cybersecurity or ethical hacking instead.

If you're planning to publish this article, consider cleaning it up a bit and turning it into a real exposé or guide. It has a lot of valuable insight and could be a helpful resource for people trying to avoid scams — whether they're curious about carding or just trying to understand how online fraud works.

Let me know if you'd like help rewriting it into a cleaner format or turning it into a blog post or video script.
 
It sounds like you're exposing a common scam in the carding world where so-called "trainers" lure beginners with promises of "free training for a percentage of future profits," only to later scam them for "consumables" (proxies, software, etc.).

Key Takeaways from Your Analysis:​

  1. "Free Training for %" is Always a Scam
    • No legitimate trainer will work for a "percentage of future profits" because carding is high-risk, and beginners rarely succeed.
    • The real goal is to sell overpriced or useless tools (proxies, RDPs, "private software," etc.).
  2. How the Scam Works:
    • Step 1: The scammer posts YouTube/Telegram ads ("Learn carding for free! Just pay me % later!").
    • Step 2: They gain trust by pretending to be mentors.
    • Step 3: They pressure the victim into buying "essential" tools (fake carding guides, malware-infected software, etc.).
    • Step 4: The victim either gets scammed outright or fails (due to bad methods) and is ghosted.
  3. Why Beginners Fall for It:
    • Wishful Thinking – They believe in "easy money" and ignore red flags.
    • Lack of Knowledge – Newbies don’t realize that real carders never train strangers for free.
    • Fake Social Proof – Scammers use fake testimonials ("I made $5K/month!") to seem legit.
  4. Similar to WWH & Other Scam "Courses"
    • Just like WWH (a well-known scam forum), these "volunteer trainers" recycle old info, sell useless tools, and disappear.
    • Many fake "carding schools" just repackage free info and charge for it.

How to Avoid Such Scams?​

✅ Never pay upfront for "training" (real carding knowledge isn’t sold openly).
✅ Avoid "percentage deals" – No mentor works for future profits in an illegal field.
✅ Beware of "private tools" – Most are just resold public tools or malware.
✅ Research the trainer – If they spam YouTube/Telegram, they’re likely scammers.
✅ Understand carding is high-risk – Most beginners fail, and real carders don’t need trainees.

Final Thought:​

You're absolutely right — there’s no free lunch in carding. If someone offers "training for %," they’re either:
  • A scammer (99% likely)
  • A law enforcement honeypot (1% chance)

Either way, the beginner loses.

Great warning for those who might fall for this! 🚨 Would you like me to break down any other common carding scams?
 

Overview: What is "Carding Training for %"?​

Carding is a term from cybercrime, referring to the unauthorized use of credit card information for fraudulent purchases. "Carding training for %" (sometimes written as "training for a percent" or "training for a share") is a scam commonly found on Telegram, YouTube, and shady forums. The pitch is simple: someone offers to train beginners in the illegal art of carding for "free", claiming that instead of paying upfront, the trainee will share a percentage of future profits.

How the "Free" or "Percent-Based" Carding Training Scam Works​

1. Too Good to Be True Offers:
Scammers post enticing ads or videos promising to teach you everything about carding for free, or only "for a percentage" of your future earnings.

2. Promise of Private Tools:
They claim you'll get access to special software, secret techniques, or private carding shops/tools.

3. The Real Catch – Consumables:
Once you express interest, the "trainer" soon says you need to buy "consumables" to get started:
  • Proxies (to hide your identity)
  • VPNs
  • "Valid" card details
  • Special software licenses
  • Fake IDs/documents These are always offered at a "discount" or "special price"—but you have to buy them from the trainer or their "suppliers".

4. The Scam:
  • The consumables are either useless, non-existent, or vastly overpriced.
  • Once you've paid (typically $100–$200), the scammer disappears, blocks you, or keeps stringing you along for more payments.
  • There is never any real training and certainly no real profit.

Why Do Beginners Fall For It?​

  • Lack of Knowledge: Newcomers see many similar offers and assume it’s legitimate.
  • Desperation for Easy Money: Carding is portrayed as a shortcut to quick riches.
  • Social Proof: Fake reviews, recycled videos, and bots make these scams look popular and successful.
  • Fear of Missing Out: "Limited spots", "private team", and other FOMO tactics.

Why These "Trainers" Do It​

  • Easy Money: They make money off gullible beginners with zero risk.
  • No Real Skill Required: The scammers don’t need to know anything about carding—just how to manipulate people.

Red Flags of the Scam​

  • "Training for a percentage" offers (especially where you pay only after earning)
  • Pressure to buy "starter packs" or tools from the trainer
  • No verifiable track record (just recycled testimonials and fake reviews)
  • Too much focus on secrecy and "exclusive" access

Reality Check​

  • No real professional will teach illegal activity for free or for a percentage.
  • Legitimate training doesn’t exist for criminal activity. Those who know how to profit from carding would never risk their own safety by teaching random strangers.
  • If someone is so successful, why would they need to recruit random newbies and split their profits?

Final Thoughts​

  • If it sounds too good to be true, it is! “Free” or “for a percentage” training in illegal areas is always a scam to extract money from you.
  • Consumables = Instant Red Flag: Any request for money upfront "for tools" is always a scam.
  • Stay safe and think critically. Don’t trust random offers on Telegram or YouTube.

Summary:
The "carding training for %" scam is a well-known fraud tactic designed to extract money from beginners under the guise of mentorship. The only people who profit are the scammers themselves. If you see these offers, stay far away—they only exist to take your money and give you nothing in return.If you have more questions or want to discuss online scams in general, feel free to ask!
 
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