In its post, Cyble states that “Our analysis suggests that this market has been around since May 2021 and is available on a Tor channel as well.”
They also include the user’s email address and phone number. This past weekend, they published a notice on their blog stating that they discovered the cards during “routine monitoring of cybercrime and Dark Web marketplaces.” These particular cards were stolen sometime during 20 and published on a new and upcoming cybercriminal marketplace called AllWorld.Cards.Īccording to the hackers offering the cards, the database of information contained credit card numbers, expiration dates, CVV, owner’s name, address, city, state, country, and zip code. Threat researchers at Cyble first discovered the cache of stolen cards. Threatpost reported this week that “Threat actors have leaked 1 million stolen credit cards for free online as a way to promote a fairly new and increasingly popular cybercriminal site dedicated to…selling payment-card credentials.” In an effort to build traffic on the dark web to AllWorld.Cards, hackers have posted millions of credit card numbers purportedly for free to anyone who wants to download them.
Now, millions of stolen credit card numbers have appeared on the dark web for free. Many data breaches have occurred over the past few years, and as a result, there is a treasure trove of stolen personal information out there belonging to innocent victims.