In the jungle of carding, you’re either the predator or the hunted. Right now, the top predators are circling two major hunting grounds: cryptocurrency and advertising. Cryptocurrency has its own cult following, but if you’re chasing that constant sweet nectar of profit, advertising is where the smart money is. We’re talking five, maybe even six figures a month if you have the balls and brains to play it right.
Truth be told, the rules of the game have changed, and it’s a bloodbath out there now. It used to be that you could slap a card on Facebook and watch the money roll in. Not anymore. The big dogs — Facebook, Google, TikTok — have built damn fortresses around their ad platforms. Their security is so tight that it’s nearly impossible for the little carders to get a piece of the action.
Pinterest is social media’s black ops. While the sheeple are banging their heads against Facebook’s iron gates, Pinterest is quietly slipping past the defenses. It’s the Wild West of advertising, where the rules are just sentences. No fancy paperwork or retinal scans required. A working card, a little street smarts, and you’re turning those $5 cards into serious cash. The best part? It’s NON-VBV.
Advertising for what?
So why are ad accounts so important? They’re pure gold in the scam world. Every scammer needs a way to push their shit, and ad space is how they do it. You’ve got your fake e-commerce sites, your malware distributors, your phishing scams, you name it. They all need a way to get their message in front of people.
And it’s not just the obvious. These accounts can make any operation stronger. Selling fake crap? Dropshipping? You bet. Sniffing cards with rogue stores? Great. Spreading malware for a bunch of logs? Advertising is your best friend. Even “legitimate” businesses with shitty payment systems need them. And they’ll pay big bucks for accounts that actually work.
You can either sell these accounts or run them yourself. Want to be a vendor? Make a bunch of clean accounts and sell them to other people. Or run your own ads and keep all the profits. Either way, once you figure out how to make these accounts, it’s like having your own money printer. Just don’t screw it up by getting too greedy.
Why Pinterest Ads?
Pinterest may not have the advertising power of Facebook or Google, but it’s currently the most affordable platform to run card ads on. Their verification process is minimal — you only need basic account details and a working card to get started.
Their fraud detection is a joke compared to the big players, meaning your card ads have a better chance of succeeding. Plus, users are mostly middle-class and willing to spend money, so even with limited targeting, you can still get decent conversions.
Yes, you won’t get the huge audience of other platforms, but Pinterest’s weak security makes it ideal for testing and scaling your carding operations. It’s a sweet spot — enough traffic to make it worthwhile, but not so closed that you can’t get your foot in the door.
Pinterest Security Basics
Pinterest security is ridiculously simple compared to other advertising platforms, but understanding three key elements can make or break your success.
Cards.
First, let’s talk about cards. Pinterest bills you in thresholds, which means they’ll hit your card multiple times as your ad spend grows. So you want a damn workhorse, not some cheap $5 card that’ll fold after a few charges. We’re talking premium BINs that scream “fuck you” to your money. Your best bet? Cards from oil-rich Middle Eastern countries like the UAE and Saudi Arabia. They’re charged, don’t get too bothered with international transactions, and will keep working long after your average card has been burned and reported.
Domains.
Then there’s managing the domains for the campaigns you’ll be running. Once a chargeback hits an account, Pinterest quickly blacklists that domain. Try running a new ad on a burned domain, and your new account will instantly freeze. There are ways around this, like cloaking and traffic redirection, but those are advanced things we’ll talk about later. For now, focus on keeping your domains clean and your maps strong.
Warm-up.
Finally, there’s the warm-up period, an important phase in any advertising operation. When you launch new campaigns, Pinterest intentionally limits your traffic for the first few days while their system evaluates the account and figures out how to drive traffic to you. This happens regardless of your budget — even if you set it to $1,000 per day, you’ll still get limited traffic during the warm-up period.
An effective strategy to avoid wasting time is to run multiple campaigns across different accounts at the same time, each using separate domains on your server. That way, when the warm-up periods are over, you’ll have several fully operational campaigns running at the same time, rather than waiting for each account to warm up individually. This maximizes your traffic potential and ensures ongoing campaign performance.
Understand these three things and you can milk an account for weeks before any red flags appear.
The carding process
Setting up an account:
Adding payment methods:
Setting up a campaign:
Domain Configuration
For each account:
Conducting campaigns:
Additional Tips
Pinterest’s domain blacklist is permanent — once burned, it’s dead. Don’t waste time trying to revive it.
Your cards need some serious juice for the warm-up phase. Pinterest hits them with random $5 to $100 payments to test the waters. When a cardholder starts to realize this, spam their phone/email to buy yourself more time.
Fraud Detection Pinterest is like a drunk bouncer — not very smart, but will quickly throw you out. One sloppy mistake with a burned account spreads like digital herpes throughout your entire operation. Never run campaigns on domains that have already burned.
This is not some long-term investment strategy. You’re pulling a daring stunt — get your accounts working, empty those cards, and disappear into another ad account. The longer you wait, the higher your chances of getting caught with your pants down.
Bins:
Bins don’t matter. Any good Plat/World/Infinite card will do.
Conclusion
Pinterest advertising is just the soft side of the scam game – its security is laughable right now, but don’t get too comfortable.
Stick to the basics: premium cards, clean domains, proper warm-up. Cut corners with cheap cards or sloppy OPSEC and watch your operation crash and burn.
Advanced topics like redirect cloaking and secure hosting will come in future guides. Consider this your starter pack.
Pinterest is training wheels – master them, then move on to bigger ad platforms. Stay humble and don’t be reckless just because you’ve run a few ad campaigns.
Now go make that money, but don’t ruin the method for everyone else.
(c) Telegram: d0ctrine
Truth be told, the rules of the game have changed, and it’s a bloodbath out there now. It used to be that you could slap a card on Facebook and watch the money roll in. Not anymore. The big dogs — Facebook, Google, TikTok — have built damn fortresses around their ad platforms. Their security is so tight that it’s nearly impossible for the little carders to get a piece of the action.
Pinterest is social media’s black ops. While the sheeple are banging their heads against Facebook’s iron gates, Pinterest is quietly slipping past the defenses. It’s the Wild West of advertising, where the rules are just sentences. No fancy paperwork or retinal scans required. A working card, a little street smarts, and you’re turning those $5 cards into serious cash. The best part? It’s NON-VBV.
Advertising for what?
So why are ad accounts so important? They’re pure gold in the scam world. Every scammer needs a way to push their shit, and ad space is how they do it. You’ve got your fake e-commerce sites, your malware distributors, your phishing scams, you name it. They all need a way to get their message in front of people.
And it’s not just the obvious. These accounts can make any operation stronger. Selling fake crap? Dropshipping? You bet. Sniffing cards with rogue stores? Great. Spreading malware for a bunch of logs? Advertising is your best friend. Even “legitimate” businesses with shitty payment systems need them. And they’ll pay big bucks for accounts that actually work.
You can either sell these accounts or run them yourself. Want to be a vendor? Make a bunch of clean accounts and sell them to other people. Or run your own ads and keep all the profits. Either way, once you figure out how to make these accounts, it’s like having your own money printer. Just don’t screw it up by getting too greedy.
Why Pinterest Ads?
Pinterest may not have the advertising power of Facebook or Google, but it’s currently the most affordable platform to run card ads on. Their verification process is minimal — you only need basic account details and a working card to get started.
Their fraud detection is a joke compared to the big players, meaning your card ads have a better chance of succeeding. Plus, users are mostly middle-class and willing to spend money, so even with limited targeting, you can still get decent conversions.
Yes, you won’t get the huge audience of other platforms, but Pinterest’s weak security makes it ideal for testing and scaling your carding operations. It’s a sweet spot — enough traffic to make it worthwhile, but not so closed that you can’t get your foot in the door.
Pinterest Security Basics
Pinterest security is ridiculously simple compared to other advertising platforms, but understanding three key elements can make or break your success.
Cards.
First, let’s talk about cards. Pinterest bills you in thresholds, which means they’ll hit your card multiple times as your ad spend grows. So you want a damn workhorse, not some cheap $5 card that’ll fold after a few charges. We’re talking premium BINs that scream “fuck you” to your money. Your best bet? Cards from oil-rich Middle Eastern countries like the UAE and Saudi Arabia. They’re charged, don’t get too bothered with international transactions, and will keep working long after your average card has been burned and reported.
Domains.
Then there’s managing the domains for the campaigns you’ll be running. Once a chargeback hits an account, Pinterest quickly blacklists that domain. Try running a new ad on a burned domain, and your new account will instantly freeze. There are ways around this, like cloaking and traffic redirection, but those are advanced things we’ll talk about later. For now, focus on keeping your domains clean and your maps strong.
Warm-up.
Finally, there’s the warm-up period, an important phase in any advertising operation. When you launch new campaigns, Pinterest intentionally limits your traffic for the first few days while their system evaluates the account and figures out how to drive traffic to you. This happens regardless of your budget — even if you set it to $1,000 per day, you’ll still get limited traffic during the warm-up period.
An effective strategy to avoid wasting time is to run multiple campaigns across different accounts at the same time, each using separate domains on your server. That way, when the warm-up periods are over, you’ll have several fully operational campaigns running at the same time, rather than waiting for each account to warm up individually. This maximizes your traffic potential and ensures ongoing campaign performance.
Understand these three things and you can milk an account for weeks before any red flags appear.
The carding process
Setting up an account:
- Create a new Pinterest business account at business.pinterest.com
- Use residential proxies for each account - data center IPs can be banned instantly.
- Fill in basic company information using false information (keep it simple).
- You can pick a random company on Flippa.com and copy its data.
- For email, it is best to use corporate domains, but any email address will do.
- Skipping all the unnecessary steps to set up your profile is a waste of time.
Adding payment methods:
- Go to Menu > Invoicing
- Create an ad account and ad account information (this may differ from the card information)
- Click "Add payment information".
- Enter card details:
- Use high limit cards ($10k+)
- Please make sure the address matches your card payment details.
- Do not use cards that have previously had fraud warnings.
- Use high limit cards ($10k+)
- Once you add it, you're all set.
Setting up a campaign:
- Go to Menu > Create Pin for Ad.
- Once you've created your Pin, click "Promote Pin".
- Select "Conversion" or, if it is not available (you need to set the tag first), use "Consideration".
- Select the Pin you just created.
- Set a daily budget of $50-$100 to start warming up.
- Focus on general keywords/interests initially
- Set the target URL to your landing page
- Profit. It will be sent for approval and you will need to wait a couple of hours before it is approved and starts getting traffic.
Domain Configuration
For each account:
- Use new domains (no history)
- Different registrars for each domain
- Clean hosting without blacklist history
- (Optional) Properly setting up cloaking to hide real landing pages
Conducting campaigns:
- Launch with a daily budget of $50-100
- Monitoring charging circuits hourly
- Prepare backup cards.
- Change cards at first refusal
- Maintain a constant level of spending in the first week (without sudden jumps).
Additional Tips
Pinterest’s domain blacklist is permanent — once burned, it’s dead. Don’t waste time trying to revive it.
Your cards need some serious juice for the warm-up phase. Pinterest hits them with random $5 to $100 payments to test the waters. When a cardholder starts to realize this, spam their phone/email to buy yourself more time.
Fraud Detection Pinterest is like a drunk bouncer — not very smart, but will quickly throw you out. One sloppy mistake with a burned account spreads like digital herpes throughout your entire operation. Never run campaigns on domains that have already burned.
This is not some long-term investment strategy. You’re pulling a daring stunt — get your accounts working, empty those cards, and disappear into another ad account. The longer you wait, the higher your chances of getting caught with your pants down.
Bins:
Bins don’t matter. Any good Plat/World/Infinite card will do.
Conclusion
Pinterest advertising is just the soft side of the scam game – its security is laughable right now, but don’t get too comfortable.
Stick to the basics: premium cards, clean domains, proper warm-up. Cut corners with cheap cards or sloppy OPSEC and watch your operation crash and burn.
Advanced topics like redirect cloaking and secure hosting will come in future guides. Consider this your starter pack.
Pinterest is training wheels – master them, then move on to bigger ad platforms. Stay humble and don’t be reckless just because you’ve run a few ad campaigns.
Now go make that money, but don’t ruin the method for everyone else.
(c) Telegram: d0ctrine