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Kentucky Cyberthief Uses Cloned Credit Card To Buy Pizza, Has 50 More On Her When Police Make The Delivery

Written by Evan Schuman
August 1st, 2012

Lesson #1 for all cyberthieves: If you’re going to use a stolen or fake credit card to get a pizza, do not have it delivered. As one Kentucky woman discovered, the police might make the delivery. But this gets better.

As police approached the 23-year-old who had phoned the order into Papa John’s, they asked to search her purse. She complied, and inside police discovered more than 50 credit-card numbers, some including names, addresses and telephone numbers. Lesson #2: Use one fake payment mechanism at a time. Going to get the pizza purchased with one bogus payment device while carrying the information to create more than four dozen more? That’s like ordering the Papa John’s everything pizza, and then eating it right before bed. It’s a move you’ll very likely regret. The new tagline for Papa John’s: Better Ingredients, Better Pizza, Better LP.


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Why Did Gonzales Hackers Like European Cards So Much Better?

I am still unclear about the core point here-- why higher value of European cards. Supply and demand, yes, makes sense. But the fact that the cards were chip and pin (EMV) should make them less valuable because that demonstrably reduces the ability to use them fraudulently. Did the author mean that the chip and pin cards could be used in a country where EMV is not implemented--the US--and this mis-match make it easier to us them since the issuing banks may not have as robust anti-fraud controls as non-EMV banks because they assumed EMV would do the fraud prevention for them Read more...
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