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Live Carding Demo (LCD): Google Store
Alright, gather round. Today were hitting the Google Store. Its not the toughest target out there but its got some juicy potential that most overlook.
Most carders overlook this goldmine thinking its too hot to touch. Their loss, our gain. Were about to show you why the Google Store should be on your radar and how to milk it for all its worth.
Why Google Store?
Heres why the Google Store is worth your time:
1. Easy to flip products: Pixels, Chromebooks, Nest gear. This shit sells itself. High demand means you wont be sitting on inventory for long.
2. Decent security: Ironically enough, even being the biggest company in the world they dont have the toughest security. Its not a cakewalk but its not that hard either. Just enough to keep the amateurs out, which means less competition for us.
3. Brand recognition: Google products have built a fanbase. More demand means faster turnover for you. Plus people trust the brand, so less questions when youre offloading the goods.
4. Consistent stock: Unlike other tech stores, Google never runs out of inventory. So you can hit them multiple times without waiting for restocks.
Enough chit-chat. Lets dive in and see what we can squeeze out of Googles pockets. Time to turn their algorithms against them and make some serious cash.
Reconnaissance
Now that weve established why the Google Store is our target,lets talk strategy. Forget your usual HTTP request recon. Were dealing with a different animal.
Since Google is the 800-pound gorilla of tech companies, doing any HTTP request recon like we usually do makes no sense. Theres virtually zero chance theyll be using thirdparty anti-fraud systems. You can bet your ass their payments and fraud assessment are all in-house.
In that case: always assume all your actions are being watched. Keyboard strokes, tab switches, mouse movements - everything. Google isnt fucking around. Theyre logging and assessing everything.
So our approach needs to be smooth. No rapid-fire add-to-carts and no lightning-fast checkouts. Were going to have to play it cool and steady like were actual customers with more money than sense.
Were not just trying to bypass a system here. Were trying to blend in with the sea of legitimate Google fanboys.
Requirements
Since Googles in-house security is so good youll need more than just your average setup. Heres the arsenal youll need to crack this nut:
1. A god-tier US card: Were talking virgin territory here. If your card has so much as looked at a Google service, kiss your chances goodbye. That means no previous use on Google Ads, Google Store or even Google Play. A fresh card is your golden ticket.
2. An aged account: No guest checkout here. Youll need a Gmail account tthat has been sitting around for at least a week. Its not a deal-breaker but itll help your success rate. Lucky for you these aged accounts are a dime a dozen on the market. Dont skimp here - a few bucks for an aged account could be the difference between success and a big fat rejection.
3. A virgin US residential drop: Google has a memory like an elephant when it comes to addresses. If your drop has so much as sniffed a chargeback, youre toast. No history of carded items from the Google Store is crucial. If youre working with a used address,brush up on my address jigging guide.it works like a charm on Google Store.
Remember: were not just throwing shit at the wall here and seeing what sticks. Each of these requirements is a critical piece of the puzzle. Skimp on one and Google will laugh in your face and cancel your order.
Process
With our toolkit ready, lets execute:
1. Setup: Launch your antidetect browser with the proxy.
2. Login: Use your aged Gmail account. No guest checkouts here.
3. Build credibility: Browse some sites and run a few searches. Dont bee-line for the store.
4. Natural approach: Search for your target item (eg Pixel) via Google. Let the search results guide you to the store.
5. Act natural: Once in the Google Store browse like a genuine buyer. Compare products, read specs.
6. Checkout: When readyproceed to checkout calmly. No rush.
If your cards solid and youve played it cool you should be albe to breeze through. Googles looking for anomalies. Your job? Dont be one.
Considerations & Advanced Tricks
A heads up: Google Store operates like Amazon when it comes to charges. Theyll run a check at checkout, but the full hit on the card doesnt come until after all verifications pass. This gives us some wiggle room.
Remember how we stressed a virgin card? Heres why: Google gets twitchy with cards that have been around their block before. Use a card thats been bound to Google services previously and youll be met with a verification page (minicharge)
But dont panic. We can turn this "bug" into a feature with some advanced fuckery:
1. Forced Trust via Verification:
Heres how to make Google your best friend:
Bind an enroll/visa alert card to one account
Try binding it to another
When the verification prompt pops up use your alert to verify
Boom. Google now trusts you like youre their long-lost son
2. The Split-Second Switcheroo:
If Google hates your drop address more than I hate slow internet try this:
Order to the cardholders billing address
The millisecond you get that sweet confirmation,chnage the delivery address
Google allows this because they havent run the full charge yet
These arent just theory. Ive personally milked the address switch trick multiple times. Its like a magic trick - now you see it, now you dont.
Simplified Flowchart
Closing: The Art of Adaptation
We’ve gone over the setup and the how. We’ve covered a lot of ground. But here’s the thing:
In this game it’s not about following steps. It’s about adapting on the fly and using every trick in the book. And sometimes writing a few new pages in that book yourself.
So go for it, but don’t stop. Try. Innovate. Adapt. The Google Store is your canvas and you are the brush. Go paint.
Class is over. Now go show Google what's up.