The latest credit card info dump was spotted by Group-IB, a firm that specializes in cyber attack prevention. The group discovered a massive collection of payment card details on Joker's Stash, an underground marketplace where people sell unauthorized digital copies of magnetic stripe data. The information is believed to have come from 177,878 different credit cards. It's not clear who is responsible for the data dump, but the details appear to have come Vclub two banks in Pakistan.

One of the largest carding sites in the world has become the victim of a recent hack. Joker's Stash was shut down in January 2021 and the company that operated it took advantage of the shut-down to gain a huge share of the market. After Joker closed, Trump's Dumps increased their market share to 40 percent. The data dump was found to include 87 percent of payment card details that were stolen from U.S. financial institutions. Besides the Joker's Stash, other carding shops are being targeted by the same cybercriminals that made it so easy to breach the systems.

A credit card dump is a collection of private financial information, such as the name, account number, expiration date, and billing address. These data dumps are illegal because they allow unauthorized people to access protected financial data from your credit card accounts. Criminals use this information to make unauthorized charges. Most of these data dumps are traded on the internet, often in the global black market. This data dump can cost you anywhere from $20 to $100 per card.

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