InterestingView attachment 7884Carding eBay with PayPal
Most carders avoid eBay like its radioactive waste. "Too risky" they say. "Too many security layers." But fuck that noise - theyre dead wrong. eBay moves billions in merch daily and with the right technique you can grab your slice of that pie without getting burned.
This guide breaks down how to exploit a critical weakness in eBays PayPal checkout process. No fancy tricks - just cold hard exploitation of their blind trust in verified shipping addresses.
eBay isnt just big - its fucking massive. Millions of transactions flow through their systems every day. Your sketchy orders? Theyre lost in an ocean of legitimate purchases. The platforms diversity is your shield - one day youre buying vintage keyboards the next its designer sneakers. This variety makes your pattern harder to spot.
Master this method and youve got yourself a reliable source of income. Not some quick hit-and-run bullshit but a sustainable operation that keeps paying out.
The PayPal Weakness
eBay gives you two payment options: direct card payments or PayPal. Direct card payments used to be reliable a year ago but their security has gotten ridiculously strict. Their new multi-layer verification is so aggressive that even legitimate customers frequently get declined.
But PayPal? Thats where we find our opening. Their entire fraud detection revolves around shipping addresses - theyve built a massive database tracking every delivery location tied to PayPal accounts and cards. When a cards legitimate owner orders something PayPal records those addresses: home work where they ship gifts. Each successful transaction adds another trusted location to their web.
PayPals algorithms are sophisticated as fuck. They analyze delivery patterns across their network building heat maps of legitimate commerce versus sus activity. They know which zip codes are fraud hotspots which addresses are known drops which buildings show unusual shipping patterns. Your order gets run through this list of risk factors before processing.
But heres their critical flaw: PayPal only verifies shipping addresses during initial authorization. If it matches prior history - boom approved. Once they give that green light if the merchant (in this case ebay) uses a two-step checkout flow buyers can often make changes to the shipping address before final confirmation. That gap between authorization and final processing? Thats our sweet spot.
This verification process was designed to stop fraud but its predictable trust protocol is exactly what makes it exploitable. By initially using the cardholders real address you satisfy PayPals fraud detection. Then during that brief window before the order locks you execute the switcheroo - changing to your drop without triggering another security scan. The two-step process creates an opportunity that PayPal cant easily close without breaking legitimate functionality.
Lets get down to the dirty details. First you need fresh cards that havent been burned on PayPal. Pair that with residential proxies matching the cards city. And yeah, you need a solid antidetect browser.
Quick note: Dont stress about getting an aged eBay account - fresh ones/guest checkouts work fine. Ill drop a guide that needs it in the future, but thats not needed for this method.
Heres how you pull it off:
- Play It Cool: Add your target items plus some cheap shit to your cart. Keep your first few orders under $500 until you get comfortable with the process - then you can gradually scale up. Once youre ready, go straight for guest checkout, add the cardholder's address as shipping, and smash that Pay with PayPal button the second it appears.
View attachment 7892- The Setup: During the PayPal checkout process, punch in the cardholder's email, if it keeps asking you to login (account already exists) keep finding the option that will make you checkout as guest.
- On the details, use the cardholder's real address as your billing and shipping. This is where most rookies fuck up - you NEED that legit address for the initial check. It's your ticket past the automated fraud screens.
- Timing Is Everything: Hit that PayPal button and wait for authorization. Once it clears and everything's green, you will be brought back to eBay for final confirmation.
- The Switch: Quick and clean - change that shipping address to your drop spot before final confirmation. This is your money move. The system's guard is down, thinking everything's kosher.
- Cover Your Ass: After the order goes through, flood the cardholder's email with spam using email bomber. Don't be one of those paranoid dipshits refreshing the order status every 2 minutes - that's a waste of energy. Just chill and wait for the shipment confirmation. Obsessively checking won't make it ship any faster.
Cashing Out Easily
Let's be real - carding eBay items and flipping them through drops or resellers is a massive time sink. You've got to find reliable drops, coordinate pickups, deal with flaky resellers, and pray your shit doesn't get seized. That's way too much hassle when there's a direct pipeline from carded goods to crypto staring you in the face.
For that case we need BitOff - a "legitimate marketplace" that's actually a digital fence converting your carded purchases straight to crypto. They pretend to be some platform for gig workers, but we all know that's just a smokescreen for their real purpose: laundering carded goods into untraceable digital currency.
Using BitOff with eBay
The process is straightforward as fuck:
* Hidden text: cannot be quoted. *
Wrap Up
This method isn't some magical hack - it's about exploiting a specific weakness in how eBay and PayPal talk to each other. Add in BitOff for instant crypto conversion, and you've got a solid system for turning cards into cash.
Remember: eBay's security team isn't stupid. They're always updating their shit. Stay unpredictable, keep your OPSEC tight, and never get greedy. Mix up your proxies, randomize your order sizes, and treat every PayPal account as disposable.
Stay frosty.
d0ctrine out.
Pretty niceView attachment 7884Carding eBay with PayPal
Most carders avoid eBay like its radioactive waste. "Too risky" they say. "Too many security layers." But fuck that noise - theyre dead wrong. eBay moves billions in merch daily and with the right technique you can grab your slice of that pie without getting burned.
This guide breaks down how to exploit a critical weakness in eBays PayPal checkout process. No fancy tricks - just cold hard exploitation of their blind trust in verified shipping addresses.
eBay isnt just big - its fucking massive. Millions of transactions flow through their systems every day. Your sketchy orders? Theyre lost in an ocean of legitimate purchases. The platforms diversity is your shield - one day youre buying vintage keyboards the next its designer sneakers. This variety makes your pattern harder to spot.
Master this method and youve got yourself a reliable source of income. Not some quick hit-and-run bullshit but a sustainable operation that keeps paying out.
The PayPal Weakness
eBay gives you two payment options: direct card payments or PayPal. Direct card payments used to be reliable a year ago but their security has gotten ridiculously strict. Their new multi-layer verification is so aggressive that even legitimate customers frequently get declined.
But PayPal? Thats where we find our opening. Their entire fraud detection revolves around shipping addresses - theyve built a massive database tracking every delivery location tied to PayPal accounts and cards. When a cards legitimate owner orders something PayPal records those addresses: home work where they ship gifts. Each successful transaction adds another trusted location to their web.
PayPals algorithms are sophisticated as fuck. They analyze delivery patterns across their network building heat maps of legitimate commerce versus sus activity. They know which zip codes are fraud hotspots which addresses are known drops which buildings show unusual shipping patterns. Your order gets run through this list of risk factors before processing.
But heres their critical flaw: PayPal only verifies shipping addresses during initial authorization. If it matches prior history - boom approved. Once they give that green light if the merchant (in this case ebay) uses a two-step checkout flow buyers can often make changes to the shipping address before final confirmation. That gap between authorization and final processing? Thats our sweet spot.
This verification process was designed to stop fraud but its predictable trust protocol is exactly what makes it exploitable. By initially using the cardholders real address you satisfy PayPals fraud detection. Then during that brief window before the order locks you execute the switcheroo - changing to your drop without triggering another security scan. The two-step process creates an opportunity that PayPal cant easily close without breaking legitimate functionality.
Lets get down to the dirty details. First you need fresh cards that havent been burned on PayPal. Pair that with residential proxies matching the cards city. And yeah, you need a solid antidetect browser.
Quick note: Dont stress about getting an aged eBay account - fresh ones/guest checkouts work fine. Ill drop a guide that needs it in the future, but thats not needed for this method.
Heres how you pull it off:
- Play It Cool: Add your target items plus some cheap shit to your cart. Keep your first few orders under $500 until you get comfortable with the process - then you can gradually scale up. Once youre ready, go straight for guest checkout, add the cardholder's address as shipping, and smash that Pay with PayPal button the second it appears.
View attachment 7892- The Setup: During the PayPal checkout process, punch in the cardholder's email, if it keeps asking you to login (account already exists) keep finding the option that will make you checkout as guest.
- On the details, use the cardholder's real address as your billing and shipping. This is where most rookies fuck up - you NEED that legit address for the initial check. It's your ticket past the automated fraud screens.
- Timing Is Everything: Hit that PayPal button and wait for authorization. Once it clears and everything's green, you will be brought back to eBay for final confirmation.
- The Switch: Quick and clean - change that shipping address to your drop spot before final confirmation. This is your money move. The system's guard is down, thinking everything's kosher.
- Cover Your Ass: After the order goes through, flood the cardholder's email with spam using email bomber. Don't be one of those paranoid dipshits refreshing the order status every 2 minutes - that's a waste of energy. Just chill and wait for the shipment confirmation. Obsessively checking won't make it ship any faster.
Cashing Out Easily
Let's be real - carding eBay items and flipping them through drops or resellers is a massive time sink. You've got to find reliable drops, coordinate pickups, deal with flaky resellers, and pray your shit doesn't get seized. That's way too much hassle when there's a direct pipeline from carded goods to crypto staring you in the face.
For that case we need BitOff - a "legitimate marketplace" that's actually a digital fence converting your carded purchases straight to crypto. They pretend to be some platform for gig workers, but we all know that's just a smokescreen for their real purpose: laundering carded goods into untraceable digital currency.
Using BitOff with eBay
The process is straightforward as fuck:
* Hidden text: cannot be quoted. *
Wrap Up
This method isn't some magical hack - it's about exploiting a specific weakness in how eBay and PayPal talk to each other. Add in BitOff for instant crypto conversion, and you've got a solid system for turning cards into cash.
Remember: eBay's security team isn't stupid. They're always updating their shit. Stay unpredictable, keep your OPSEC tight, and never get greedy. Mix up your proxies, randomize your order sizes, and treat every PayPal account as disposable.
Stay frosty.
d0ctrine out.
D0ctrine the goat once againView attachment 7884Carding eBay with PayPal
Most carders avoid eBay like its radioactive waste. "Too risky" they say. "Too many security layers." But fuck that noise - theyre dead wrong. eBay moves billions in merch daily and with the right technique you can grab your slice of that pie without getting burned.
This guide breaks down how to exploit a critical weakness in eBays PayPal checkout process. No fancy tricks - just cold hard exploitation of their blind trust in verified shipping addresses.
eBay isnt just big - its fucking massive. Millions of transactions flow through their systems every day. Your sketchy orders? Theyre lost in an ocean of legitimate purchases. The platforms diversity is your shield - one day youre buying vintage keyboards the next its designer sneakers. This variety makes your pattern harder to spot.
Master this method and youve got yourself a reliable source of income. Not some quick hit-and-run bullshit but a sustainable operation that keeps paying out.
The PayPal Weakness
eBay gives you two payment options: direct card payments or PayPal. Direct card payments used to be reliable a year ago but their security has gotten ridiculously strict. Their new multi-layer verification is so aggressive that even legitimate customers frequently get declined.
But PayPal? Thats where we find our opening. Their entire fraud detection revolves around shipping addresses - theyve built a massive database tracking every delivery location tied to PayPal accounts and cards. When a cards legitimate owner orders something PayPal records those addresses: home work where they ship gifts. Each successful transaction adds another trusted location to their web.
PayPals algorithms are sophisticated as fuck. They analyze delivery patterns across their network building heat maps of legitimate commerce versus sus activity. They know which zip codes are fraud hotspots which addresses are known drops which buildings show unusual shipping patterns. Your order gets run through this list of risk factors before processing.
But heres their critical flaw: PayPal only verifies shipping addresses during initial authorization. If it matches prior history - boom approved. Once they give that green light if the merchant (in this case ebay) uses a two-step checkout flow buyers can often make changes to the shipping address before final confirmation. That gap between authorization and final processing? Thats our sweet spot.
This verification process was designed to stop fraud but its predictable trust protocol is exactly what makes it exploitable. By initially using the cardholders real address you satisfy PayPals fraud detection. Then during that brief window before the order locks you execute the switcheroo - changing to your drop without triggering another security scan. The two-step process creates an opportunity that PayPal cant easily close without breaking legitimate functionality.
Lets get down to the dirty details. First you need fresh cards that havent been burned on PayPal. Pair that with residential proxies matching the cards city. And yeah, you need a solid antidetect browser.
Quick note: Dont stress about getting an aged eBay account - fresh ones/guest checkouts work fine. Ill drop a guide that needs it in the future, but thats not needed for this method.
Heres how you pull it off:
- Play It Cool: Add your target items plus some cheap shit to your cart. Keep your first few orders under $500 until you get comfortable with the process - then you can gradually scale up. Once youre ready, go straight for guest checkout, add the cardholder's address as shipping, and smash that Pay with PayPal button the second it appears.
View attachment 7892- The Setup: During the PayPal checkout process, punch in the cardholder's email, if it keeps asking you to login (account already exists) keep finding the option that will make you checkout as guest.
- On the details, use the cardholder's real address as your billing and shipping. This is where most rookies fuck up - you NEED that legit address for the initial check. It's your ticket past the automated fraud screens.
- Timing Is Everything: Hit that PayPal button and wait for authorization. Once it clears and everything's green, you will be brought back to eBay for final confirmation.
- The Switch: Quick and clean - change that shipping address to your drop spot before final confirmation. This is your money move. The system's guard is down, thinking everything's kosher.
- Cover Your Ass: After the order goes through, flood the cardholder's email with spam using email bomber. Don't be one of those paranoid dipshits refreshing the order status every 2 minutes - that's a waste of energy. Just chill and wait for the shipment confirmation. Obsessively checking won't make it ship any faster.
Cashing Out Easily
Let's be real - carding eBay items and flipping them through drops or resellers is a massive time sink. You've got to find reliable drops, coordinate pickups, deal with flaky resellers, and pray your shit doesn't get seized. That's way too much hassle when there's a direct pipeline from carded goods to crypto staring you in the face.
For that case we need BitOff - a "legitimate marketplace" that's actually a digital fence converting your carded purchases straight to crypto. They pretend to be some platform for gig workers, but we all know that's just a smokescreen for their real purpose: laundering carded goods into untraceable digital currency.
Using BitOff with eBay
The process is straightforward as fuck:
* Hidden text: cannot be quoted. *
Wrap Up
This method isn't some magical hack - it's about exploiting a specific weakness in how eBay and PayPal talk to each other. Add in BitOff for instant crypto conversion, and you've got a solid system for turning cards into cash.
Remember: eBay's security team isn't stupid. They're always updating their shit. Stay unpredictable, keep your OPSEC tight, and never get greedy. Mix up your proxies, randomize your order sizes, and treat every PayPal account as disposable.
Stay frosty.
d0ctrine out.