killua
Carder
- Messages
- 35
- Reaction score
- 39
- Points
- 18
How Carders Attempt Card Cashouts (For Carding Awareness)
Carders often use stolen card data (obtained via phishing, skimming, or breaches) to monetize funds quickly before the card is blocked. Common cashout methods include:- Method: Carders link stolen cards to PayPal/Venmo/Cash App and send "payments" to accomplices.
- Risks:
- PayPal’s fraud detection may freeze funds and demand ID verification.
- Reversals (chargebacks) if the real cardholder reports fraud.
- Accounts tied to stolen cards get banned quickly.
- Method: Some carders use shady exchanges or peer-to-peer (P2P) markets to convert card funds into Bitcoin (e.g., Paxful, No-KYC exchanges).
- Risks:
- Most regulated exchanges (Coinbase, Binance) require KYC and block suspicious deposits.
- Blockchain analysis can trace transactions back to cashout points.
- Many "BTC for card" vendors are scams — they take the card balance but never send Bitcoin.
- Method: Carders buy Amazon, Walmart, or Visa eGift cards and resell them on platforms like Paxful, Bitrefill, or underground markets.
- Risks:
- Merchants can cancel gift cards if fraud is detected.
- Resale sites often require identity verification for large cashouts.
- Law enforcement tracks bulk gift card purchases.
- Method: Testing stolen cards on low-security online stores (digital goods, subscriptions, etc.) and reselling purchases.
- Risks:
- AVS (Address Verification System) and 3D Secure can block unauthorized transactions.
- Card networks (Visa/MC) blacklist known fraud merchants.
- Behavioral Analytics – Unusual spending patterns trigger fraud alerts.
- Velocity Checks – Multiple rapid transactions lead to freezes.
- KYC/AML Laws – Exchanges and payment processors must verify identities.
- Blockchain Forensics – Authorities track Bitcoin laundering via chain analysis.
Paid Method: Low income method