Many carders are currently facing a wave of cancellations, even on well-established accounts and clean proxies. The reason is simple: anti-fraud systems (AF) have switched to in-depth analysis of behavioral factors and data verification against external databases in real time.
Below is a brief checklist for setting up a setup that currently shows the most stable results.
Summary:
- Drop validation: Address verification via BG services.
- Billing Address: The mechanics of changing an address by dialing.
- Hardware ID: Why emulation and anti-detections are starting to lose out to real hardware.
1. Data preparation: Working with Background Check (BG).
What is Background Check (BG) in the context of hit?
In the US, information about residents is consolidated into huge databases: move histories, car registrations, jobs, and even relatives. Popular services like Whitepages, PeopleLooker, or BeenVerified are just the tip of the iceberg, but they're enough to understand whether "your buyer" actually exists. Tier-1 shops have long been integrated with databases. If you provide a delivery address that's not linked to a recipient's name in public records, your fraud score skyrockets.
Data verification algorithm:
1. Check the drop before working. Take your drop's details and run them through services like Whitepages, PeopleLooker, or BeenVerified. Your task is to ensure that the address they accept packs to is actually listed in their database.
Important: If the drop's address isn't in their BG profile, the chances of success are close to zero. Look for a drop who accepts packs to an address that's listed in their database.
2. Get a real phone number. Don't use random numbers. The BG report almost always shows the real mobile number assigned to the drop.
Why: Antifraud checks the number. If it sees that the number in the order actually belongs to this person (the Carrier Name matches the holder's data), the account's trust value soars.
3. Clone the email from the database. Reports often show old or current email addresses of the drop, for example, g.johnson88@gmail.com.
Hack: Check if the same login is available on other services (@yahoo.com, @outlook.com, @mail.com). If it is, register it. For antifraud, an email whose login matches the real data in the database looks much more reliable than a freshly registered one like workwork2026@gmail.com.
Summary of the first step: Before spending any material, spend 5 minutes on the BG check. Your order information (Address + Phone + Name) must match exactly what the system sees in US public records. This is a database, without which there's no point in accessing legitimate stores.
2. Changing the Billing Address: Making Shipping = Billing
Many newbies try to hit payments to "different" addresses (Ship ≠ Bill), which immediately triggers manual verification by anti-fraud systems. The most technical way around this is to change the card billing to the address of your drop.
How it works in practice: In the US, there are a number of banks (so-called "giving" bins) where the owner's address can be changed instantly with a phone call. Wells Fargo is a classic example of this.
What you'll need to change:
- Fullz: First name, last name, current address, phone number.
- SSN + DOB: Check through services on the forum, it costs pennies.
- Call: If you're not confident in your English, it's better to outsource the job to professional callers.
Procedure:
- Call: Take the card, check the holder's SSN/DOB.
- Call your bank: Request a change of your mailing/billing address to the address of your drop (which we've already pre-checked with BG in the first step).
- Validation: At the same time, you can check your balance through the robot to understand how much profit to expect.
Advice: Don't skimp on changing your billing. This significantly increases throughput at "capricious" shops that don't send to intermediaries. If anyone needs up-to-date binaries, which are now easily receptive to address changes, write me, I'll send you a couple of options.
3. Hardware: Why a physical device will outperform any software.
Even with a perfect drop and billing, you can hit a wall if you try to cheat the system with software substitutions. While others spend years tinkering with anti-detection settings, trying to "draw" trust, the pros simply use an environment that shops have no complaints about.
Visualize the situation: Imagine: somewhere in suburban New Jersey, there's an ordinary Samsung phone sitting on a nightstand. Its owner, a guy named Steve, is watching TV while his phone peacefully charges. Meanwhile, you, anywhere in the world, open your laptop and... become Steve.
This isn't a plot from Black Mirror. This is DroidDesk.io — a service for remote access to real, physical smartphones located all over the world. This isn't a cloud-based fake. This is a real phone, charging at someone's home — and you use it from anywhere in the world through a regular browser.
Why this is head and shoulders above any software:
Real hardware: The phone has a real IMEI, serial number, and battery. Antifraud detects a real smartphone, not a "rendered" configuration. It's impossible to find fault.
Trusted connection: You access the network through SIM cards from American carriers (AT&T, T-Mobile). Mobile IP has the highest trust priority — to the store, you look like a regular customer.
No detections: You access the shop like any ordinary American, using your personal phone. This eliminates 99% of security issues.
Wishing you profitable carding and long tracking times! If this topic gains traction, I'll create a second part, covering specific shops that support this combination.
Below is a brief checklist for setting up a setup that currently shows the most stable results.
Summary:
- Drop validation: Address verification via BG services.
- Billing Address: The mechanics of changing an address by dialing.
- Hardware ID: Why emulation and anti-detections are starting to lose out to real hardware.
1. Data preparation: Working with Background Check (BG).
What is Background Check (BG) in the context of hit?
In the US, information about residents is consolidated into huge databases: move histories, car registrations, jobs, and even relatives. Popular services like Whitepages, PeopleLooker, or BeenVerified are just the tip of the iceberg, but they're enough to understand whether "your buyer" actually exists. Tier-1 shops have long been integrated with databases. If you provide a delivery address that's not linked to a recipient's name in public records, your fraud score skyrockets.
Data verification algorithm:
1. Check the drop before working. Take your drop's details and run them through services like Whitepages, PeopleLooker, or BeenVerified. Your task is to ensure that the address they accept packs to is actually listed in their database.
Important: If the drop's address isn't in their BG profile, the chances of success are close to zero. Look for a drop who accepts packs to an address that's listed in their database.
2. Get a real phone number. Don't use random numbers. The BG report almost always shows the real mobile number assigned to the drop.
Why: Antifraud checks the number. If it sees that the number in the order actually belongs to this person (the Carrier Name matches the holder's data), the account's trust value soars.
3. Clone the email from the database. Reports often show old or current email addresses of the drop, for example, g.johnson88@gmail.com.
Hack: Check if the same login is available on other services (@yahoo.com, @outlook.com, @mail.com). If it is, register it. For antifraud, an email whose login matches the real data in the database looks much more reliable than a freshly registered one like workwork2026@gmail.com.
Summary of the first step: Before spending any material, spend 5 minutes on the BG check. Your order information (Address + Phone + Name) must match exactly what the system sees in US public records. This is a database, without which there's no point in accessing legitimate stores.
2. Changing the Billing Address: Making Shipping = Billing
Many newbies try to hit payments to "different" addresses (Ship ≠ Bill), which immediately triggers manual verification by anti-fraud systems. The most technical way around this is to change the card billing to the address of your drop.
How it works in practice: In the US, there are a number of banks (so-called "giving" bins) where the owner's address can be changed instantly with a phone call. Wells Fargo is a classic example of this.
What you'll need to change:
- Fullz: First name, last name, current address, phone number.
- SSN + DOB: Check through services on the forum, it costs pennies.
- Call: If you're not confident in your English, it's better to outsource the job to professional callers.
Procedure:
- Call: Take the card, check the holder's SSN/DOB.
- Call your bank: Request a change of your mailing/billing address to the address of your drop (which we've already pre-checked with BG in the first step).
- Validation: At the same time, you can check your balance through the robot to understand how much profit to expect.
Advice: Don't skimp on changing your billing. This significantly increases throughput at "capricious" shops that don't send to intermediaries. If anyone needs up-to-date binaries, which are now easily receptive to address changes, write me, I'll send you a couple of options.
3. Hardware: Why a physical device will outperform any software.
Even with a perfect drop and billing, you can hit a wall if you try to cheat the system with software substitutions. While others spend years tinkering with anti-detection settings, trying to "draw" trust, the pros simply use an environment that shops have no complaints about.
Visualize the situation: Imagine: somewhere in suburban New Jersey, there's an ordinary Samsung phone sitting on a nightstand. Its owner, a guy named Steve, is watching TV while his phone peacefully charges. Meanwhile, you, anywhere in the world, open your laptop and... become Steve.
This isn't a plot from Black Mirror. This is DroidDesk.io — a service for remote access to real, physical smartphones located all over the world. This isn't a cloud-based fake. This is a real phone, charging at someone's home — and you use it from anywhere in the world through a regular browser.
Why this is head and shoulders above any software:
Real hardware: The phone has a real IMEI, serial number, and battery. Antifraud detects a real smartphone, not a "rendered" configuration. It's impossible to find fault.
Trusted connection: You access the network through SIM cards from American carriers (AT&T, T-Mobile). Mobile IP has the highest trust priority — to the store, you look like a regular customer.
No detections: You access the shop like any ordinary American, using your personal phone. This eliminates 99% of security issues.
Wishing you profitable carding and long tracking times! If this topic gains traction, I'll create a second part, covering specific shops that support this combination.