Instagram "Likes" Worth More Than Stolen Credit Cards
Barence writes "In the world of online fraud, a fake fan on Instagram can be worth five times more than a stolen credit card number. In a sign of the growing value of social network 'likes', the Zeus virus has been modified to create bogus Instagram 'likes' that can be used to generate buzz for a company or individual, according to cyber experts at RSA, the security division of EMC. These fake 'likes' are sold in batches of 1,000 on hacker forums, where cybercriminals also flog credit card numbers and other information stolen from PCs. According to RSA, 1,000 Instagram 'followers' can be bought for $15 and 1,000 Instagram 'likes' go for $30, whereas 1,000 credit card numbers cost as little as $6."
You can erase and re-encode a different account number on an old mag stripe card. You may have noticed some stores have the cashier manually enter the last four digits of the credit card to prevent against this kind of fraud.
For a swipe-it-yourself terminal where the cashier doesn't see or handle the card, the bad guys can use any old card with a mag stripe. Some thieves have been known to reuse old gift cards. At least one scammer glued old VCR tape to cardboard squares and hand-wrote the PIN on the face of the cardboard as he encoded them. He then stood in front of an ATM with a stack of disposable cards, feeding them in one after another to rapidly tap as many accounts as he could.
Oh, and the entire article is wrong by three orders of magnitude. ONE credit card account number can go for between $2.00 - $40.00, based on the type of account and quality of numbers (the percent that will work.) ONE THOUSAND Instagram followers goes for $15.00. That's $0.015 for each fake follower. That's comparable to the going rate for bogus Twitter accounts ($0.02 - $0.10 each), Yahoo email accounts ($0.01 each), or Hotmail accounts ($0.012 each.) Gmail accounts are harder to dynamically create, perceived as spam-resistant, and therefore more valuable to bad guys, and go for $0.20 each.
John