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First, I will explain the terms so that everything is clear.
1. CC is a credit card. This is not an obligatory credit card, it can also be a debit card, it is simply customary to call all plastic payment cards that way.
2. Zip - postal code.
3. CH or cardholder - the owner of the card, the person who owns the money on it.
4. Shop - an online store with some kind of goods.
5. Sock - Proxy SOCKS
That's why they call it that. Needed in order to disguise as CH.
6. Tunnel - roughly speaking a server to which you can connect and surf the Internet through it. Also used to disguise as CH.
7. Carding (Driving) - the process of ordering goods for someone else's bucks.
8. Warming up the shop - the process when we sit on the shop's website, looking at various products, portraying a real buyer. Also, warming up a shop is sometimes called driving in inexpensive goods before driving in the main product.
9. Drop - a person who accepts the goods at his address and transfers it further, for example, a stingy one or forwards to another address.
10. Stuff buyer or drop service - a person who accepts the stock and then resells it, and the carder pays a percentage.
Now I will describe how the process itself takes place, in stages.
How to drive from a plastic card? It's simple. First, I buy data from the card. Then I pick up a sock or a tunnel under it, try to get as close as possible to the CH. Ideally, if the ip will match even with the exact location of the cardholder by zip. If this does not work out, then I take it under the city. Then I additionally configure the system, for example, set the appropriate time and time zone, well, etc.
The next step is to drive in the goods
I go to the store, "walk" around it, depicting a real buyer who chooses the goods. I add the goods I need to the cart and go to pay for them. I write all the data from the bank card in the required fields and click pay. If everything is good, then the product is hammered ? If the payment has not gone through, I go to another shop and try again. If it still doesn't work, it means that a not very successful mate was caught, I take a new one and start over. Yes, this also happens, it is not always successful to drive in) But if you take a responsible approach to setting up the system and do not hammer into warming up the shop, then it works well.
After driving in, I wait until the goods reach the drop. After that, I get money from the do-it-yourselfer. Typically, this is from 30 to 60 percent of the value of the product. Or I can deliver the product to my country and sell it here, but this is a lot of troubles) As for me, it's easier to buy two goods than to carry one product to myself and sell it.
1. CC is a credit card. This is not an obligatory credit card, it can also be a debit card, it is simply customary to call all plastic payment cards that way.
2. Zip - postal code.
3. CH or cardholder - the owner of the card, the person who owns the money on it.
4. Shop - an online store with some kind of goods.
5. Sock - Proxy SOCKS
That's why they call it that. Needed in order to disguise as CH.
6. Tunnel - roughly speaking a server to which you can connect and surf the Internet through it. Also used to disguise as CH.
7. Carding (Driving) - the process of ordering goods for someone else's bucks.
8. Warming up the shop - the process when we sit on the shop's website, looking at various products, portraying a real buyer. Also, warming up a shop is sometimes called driving in inexpensive goods before driving in the main product.
9. Drop - a person who accepts the goods at his address and transfers it further, for example, a stingy one or forwards to another address.
10. Stuff buyer or drop service - a person who accepts the stock and then resells it, and the carder pays a percentage.
Now I will describe how the process itself takes place, in stages.
How to drive from a plastic card? It's simple. First, I buy data from the card. Then I pick up a sock or a tunnel under it, try to get as close as possible to the CH. Ideally, if the ip will match even with the exact location of the cardholder by zip. If this does not work out, then I take it under the city. Then I additionally configure the system, for example, set the appropriate time and time zone, well, etc.
The next step is to drive in the goods
After driving in, I wait until the goods reach the drop. After that, I get money from the do-it-yourselfer. Typically, this is from 30 to 60 percent of the value of the product. Or I can deliver the product to my country and sell it here, but this is a lot of troubles) As for me, it's easier to buy two goods than to carry one product to myself and sell it.