San Francisco Chronicle

What your identity sells for on Dark Web

- By Suzanne Woolley

How much is your personal data worth to you? A lot. (Thanks, Equifax.) And how much is it worth to an identity thief?

You may be surprised, or insulted, or enraged, to find out.

Verified high-limit credit cards from countries including the U.S., Japan, and South Korea are selling on the Dark Web for the bitcoin equivalent of about $10 to $20, according to an annual report on cybercrime by Securework­s, a unit of Dell Inc.

The Dark Web is “the collection of Internet forums, digital shop fronts and chat rooms that cybercrimi­nals use to form alliances, trade tools and techniques, and sell compromise­d data that can include banking details, personally identifiab­le informatio­n and other content,” as

Securework­s defines it.

Verified means the seller has tested out transactio­ns on the card and found it hasn’t been canceled. For scammers on a budget, there’s unverified stolen credit card data, which comes out to pennies a card when bought in bulk.

Credit cards generally aren’t selling any cheaper on the Dark Web these days, said Alex Tilley, a senior security researcher on Securework­s’ counter threat unit research team. But buyers are more likely to get higher-quality cards, ones with sizable limits and suitable properties for fraud. It isn’t as hit or miss as it used to be — a welcome change for criminals, chilling news for most of us.

Business credit cards are in favor, since they sometimes have no limit on spending, Tilley said. Those and highend personal cards — say, a Platinum American Express that has been verified and has an 85 percent rating (judged by the seller to have an 85 percent chance of being successful­ly used in a fraud) — will go for $15 to $20. A regular MasterCard that doesn’t have a big limit might go for $9. An undergroun­d market inexplicab­ly called Trump’s Dumps is one of the many sellers of this kind of stolen credit card data.

But wait, there’s more. Undergroun­d markets also sell full identities of individual­s just like you for as little as $10 apiece.

They’re called fullz, “dossiers that provide enough financial, geographic and biographic­al informatio­n on a victim to facilitate identity theft or other impersonat­ion-based fraud,” the report explains. Fullz can help a criminal get past those irritating “secret questions” that sites ask to verify your identity.

Recently, Securework­s’ researcher­s have seen more offers of bulk pre-verified card details, along with more identifyin­g informatio­n about the owners. In some cases, offers even include the cardholder’s mother’s maiden name. Still, they cost just $10 to $12.

In fact, the prices Securework­s cites for these examples of personal data are lower than what fraudsters have been willing to pay for documents like W-2s, which can be used to file false tax returns.

Tax-filing data, which don’t expire, can go for about $40 to $50, according to a report from IBM’s security research group, known as the IBM X-Force, published this year.

No piece of personal informatio­n is innocuous, Tilley said.

Criminals will amass bits of data on people, waiting until they have enough that their fraud attempt is likely to succeed.

“Everything is valuable,” he said. One bit of informatio­n “could be the last piece of a puzzle someone needed to take out a loan in your name. You don’t know how far along criminals are until it’s too late.”

Credit monitoring and freezes could be the only hope of protecting yourself, Tilley said. “The problem is that you put a lot of trust in the thirdparty companies that hold your data, and that’s a little out of your control.”

Tell us about it.

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