New carding marketplace advertises its services by publishing 1 million credit cards for free

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According to experts, half of the published maps are valid.

Cybercriminals decided to advertise their new carding marketplace by publishing for free on hacker forums a part of their stolen bank card data. So, last week, the administrators of the new underground trading platform AllWorld Cards posted on several cybercriminal forums the data of 1 million credit cards stolen in 2018-2019.
Of the 98 randomly selected samples, 27% were still valid, according to AllWorld Cards administrators. However, according to the specialists of the Italian information security company D3Labs, 50% of the cards are valid.

Cyble cybersecurity specialists also analyzed the published data and told BleepingComputer that the leak contains credit card numbers, expiration dates, CVVs, first and last names of holders, countries, states and cities of their residence, postal codes and residential addresses, email addresses and telephone numbers.

To date, Cyble experts have analyzed only 400,000 cards, and so far the top five banks most frequently encountered in leakage include:
State Bank of India - 44,654 cards;
JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association - 27,440 cards;
The largest financial institution in Mexico BBVA Bancomer - 21,624 cards;
Toronto-Dominion Bank, the second largest financial holding in Canada - 14 647 cards;
Italian postal operator Poste Italiane, also providing financial services, - 14,066 cards.

The All World Cards website is a newcomer to the carding arena and has been received by cybercriminals with a warm welcome (free samples have been downloaded numerous times). The site was launched in May 2021 and currently has 2,634,615 credit card details at its disposal, most of which belong to holders in the United States (1,167,616 cards). Data costs range from $ 0.3 to $ 14.4 per card. The cost of 73% of the cards put up for sale is $ 3-5.
 
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