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Carding during holidays

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It’s that time of year again. Forget about peace on Earth — focus on the annual shopping frenzy known as the holiday season. Christmas and New Year’s are upon us, and with it comes a huge surge in online orders. While regular people are busy making their wish lists, you should be preparing for a different kind of holiday. That’s right — it’s time to make it rain other people’s money.

The season for volume

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Here’s the thing: The holiday season isn’t all about lights and eggnog. It’s about money — or, in our world, profits. Online shopping volume skyrockets during this time of year. We’re talking Black Friday levels of chaos, but an entire month of desperate shoppers.

Let me set the scene: Online holiday spending in the U.S. is projected to hit astronomical numbers this year. We’re talking a major increase from last year’s already impressive numbers. A huge chunk of that spending occurs in the weeks leading up to Christmas. It’s a gift-buying frenzy fueled by holiday stress and a whole lot of marketing.

Every Tom Dick and Harry is rushing to buy presents. They’re not just buying one or two things; they’re filling their virtual shopping carts with everything from ugly sweaters to the latest gadgets. This creates a huge surge in transactions, and that’s where you come in, you enterprising carders.

Carders' Playground

With such an insane volume of orders, three things happen that make our lives easier:

Mixing

First, it becomes much easier for your fraudulent orders to slip through the cracks. Picture this: millions of legitimate transactions flood the system every hour. Your transactions? They're barely noticeable. Banks and payment processors are overwhelmed by this tidal wave of holiday spending, and their fraud detection systems are exhausted.

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Most of the cards you use are probably also used for legitimate holiday shopping. Your average Joe is buying gifts for his family, just like every year. Banks expect a surge in spending during this time, so they’re unlikely to flag a few extra transactions as suspicious. Your transactions are mixed in with the surge in legitimate purchases. This is your chance to show off your sneaky shtick. The sheer volume of transactions is your best friend. It’s your camouflage. It’s your invisibility cloak.

Holiday Antifraud Control

Here’s the best part. During the holidays, companies often manually lower their fraud prevention systems. Why? Because they don’t want to lose sales.

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Fraud protection systems are designed to find a balance between blocking fraud and not annoying legitimate customers. If the system is too strict, it blocks a ton of legitimate orders, and the company loses money. If it is too lax, fraud increases, and the company still loses money.

During the holidays, the risk of legitimate orders being blocked increases. Imagine a mom trying to buy a PS5 for her kid, but her card is declined because some algorithm thinks she is a fraud. She will not be happy and may go elsewhere. Companies know this, so they make their fraud protection systems more lenient during peak hours.

Think of a bouncer at a club. On a normal night, he is strict about checking IDs. But on New Year's Eve, when the line is long and the club is crowded, he is more lenient because he knows that being too strict will ruin the party. Companies do the same damn thing with their fraud protection systems.

Phishing Fever

It’s not just legitimate orders and transactions that hit record highs during the holidays. Oh no, my friends, it’s also high time for scam shops and phishers. These guys are taking advantage of the shopping frenzy like the parasites they are.

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Think about it: Everyone is rushing around, desperate to grab these latest deals. They’re clicking on links, entering their details, and generally being less careful than usual. These jerks are practically begging to have their credentials stolen. Meanwhile, your lousy little scam shops will be driving traffic.

When you run those shady ads on Google and Facebook, you’ll see high click-through rates. People are so desperate to find deals that they’ll click on anything that even remotely resembles a bargain. Your conversion rates will be impressive. More people are checking out, fewer are abandoning their carts. Every metric you don’t care about is skyrocketing: clicks, conversions, completed purchases. You’ll be drowning in more stolen credit card data than you can use.

A Toast to the Year

That’s it. The holiday season isn’t just a time to give and receive; it’s a time to take what you want. This is the season when transaction volume works in your favor and the guardians of fraud prevention are busy elsewhere.

As you embark on your holiday fraudulent binge, remember these lessons. Embrace the chaos, blend in with the crowd, and take advantage of the reduced security. And never forget that the best gifts are the ones you don’t have to pay for.

So go forth, my band of criminals, and card this holiday season. May your stockings be full of ill-gotten gains, and may your new year be filled with even more profits. Cheers to the season of successful carding, and remember: when it comes to holiday fraud, it’s better to give than to receive, especially when you’re handing out other people’s money. Happy Holidays!

(c) Telegram: d0ctrine
 
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