Some people just really don't know any better...and/or just out of it: "Here's free Wi-Fi but enter your full credit card details to gain access!" It's not like you're registering on a porn site and they want/need some way of proving you're of legal age.
How would a vpn help? You set up the vpn after connecting to a network. Nevertheless in this example you simply input credit card details on a webpage so a vpn has nothing to do with this. The vpn is used to make it harder to pinpoint your current network. Masks what network you are using, making it appear that you are connected through a different network for ex in Guatemala. You sir just found out about vpn and that you can do dodgy shit with it and think you're a hacker of sorts.. Or you know more than i do about it. In any case the obvious solution is to make these transactions over trusted networks and have some common sense not to share details on a fucking hotel lobby.
You know, setting up a payment gateway on a free wifi hub, and then actually charging the card for the amount you said you were going to charge (ie, instead of, like the video shows, buying stuff wildly in excess of the cost of wifi) would be a brilliant scheme. They were asked to pay $x for wifi, they agreed to pay $x for wifi, so when they see the bill for $x for wifi they'll think nothing of it. Meanwhile, the "conman" has the $x for doing almost nothing. Much safer.
WTF kind of idiot would log on to a hotel wifi using their credit card anyway? What kind of cheap POS hotel doesn't offer free wifi these days? And no F'in way would a legit hotel ever require credit card information as a security measure. At best they would just change their password every now and then and only give it out to guests.
It doesn't matter if it isn't common for Wi-Fi networks to ask for your credit card information. That's obvious nowadays, but this video is pretty old. However, you can still be scammed if you end up logging-in to a fake Wi-Fi network. They can redirect your web requests to fake versions of the sites that record your data (phishing). Also, if you are not using an encrypted protocol (HTTPS) your information could be stolen through a packet sniffer, even if you are entering it into a legitimate website. So, to be safe: 1) Always ask some employee, not only for the Wi-Fi password, but also for the correct network. 2) When on a public network, be extremely careful with any and all private data you enter, be it full name, ID, Passport number, Credit Cards, Usernames, Passwords, etc. 3) Double check the website links to make sure you've entered the correct site and not a phishing version. 4) Always use the HTTPS version of every website. 5) Consider getting a VPN for extra protection.
I do. Because I thought about that, too. That Internet these days already theoretically is free. But: free WiFi is not secure. In Romania for example I wouldn‘t use it. Because they are professionalized gangsters there. (skimmers & credit card scammers)
There is a much easier way to tell if its legitimate. Put in a fake credit card number. A legitimate paid wifi network will poll your bank for verification instantly. A guy intercepting the number won't know if it's fake untill he tries to use it. Or you could put "I'm watching you" in the name slot and look around for people that look freaked out.
An important thing is that on a public WiFi network, everyone can see everyone's traffic, except if it is encrypted (for example HTTPS). An attacker can sniff traffic without connecting to the network using monitor mode. And for HTTPS sites without HSTS, if you only enter the domain name like chase.com, and not chase.com, the attacker can keep the site from redirecting you to HTTPS, so he can still sniff you. (I was shocked that Chase does not use HSTS.) And never ignore certificate warnings, especially on public networks!
Lot's of people asking about the delivery address. Have your item(s) delivered to an empty home that's for sale. Remove the For Sale sign the day of the delivery and pick up your item(s) as soon as they're dropped off. It helps to pick the fastest delivery option (your not paying for it!) and to let the delivery company know it's okay to leave it on the front porch (or wherever).
"I would never ever send sensitive information... over wireless. *It's not safe*". That's not really true when everything is done properly though (proper encrypted communication over a secure identified network). That said, I still prefer wired connections. Wireless can frequently be slow. Plus obviously many people may do the proper verifications/precaustions for a trusted secure wireless connection.
I got scammed just like this yesterday, but Im a student and I didn’t have any money in my account luckily. In fact, the scammer felt so sorry for my broke ass he put money into my account.
the thing is .. u either send it to a nittys yard (a fene-in other words a junki) or pay for a post box for the packages to be sent to and give all the wrong details.. also use the card u have just gotten to pay for the post box iygm
It may be easy to purchase items with stolen card details but most companies only deliver to the cardholder's address. If you use the card to buy things like airline tickets that wouldn't work either because card account names won't match passport etc.
Cept all that network activity for his fake hotspot is on the hotel's network logs. You'd be better off using your phone as a private mobile hotspot, connecting your laptop to it, then using your laptop as a public hotspot with the same name as the one you're trying to fake. Your latency would be crap, but the signal would still be strong, which gets you the clicks. With no evidence left behind.
Fryklballs: I was thinking of that myself. most hotels I stay at have free wi-fi. I dont know about english cities or foreign countries. However any good sensible person should know that several wifi signals can be located in an area at any given time, and you should ask the hotel staff if you are having questions.
bmwsux6 MOST PEOPLE PAY FOR HOTELS WITH CREDIT CARDS SO THEY WOULD THINK THAT THE HOTEL REQUIRES A CREDIT CARD VERIFICATION ONLY TO VERIFY THEY ARE A GUEST NOT JUST A RANDOM PERSON TRYING TO GET FREE WIFI
I don't know how many Wi-Fi networks you've connected to over the years but I would be seriously wary of any network that requires credit card details before granting access - especially in places where you already pay for other services (a room in a hotel, food in a restaurant)...
This is the EASY way, but with the hard way you can capture network traffic and in some cases, get sensitive information or session cookies (info, that let's you log in to websites). You can also do MiTM attack, in which you can modify webpages the victim sees _Sorry for computer-pepole if I made it too simplistlic_
1) No one is going to pay for the Wifi. 2) No one is paying via their credit card details online. 3) Credit card company will call to verify purchase, then cancel it. 4) It's the banks money, not the Mark's.
Matthew Butterworth actually no. you need a special receiver for that or you need to have your computer act as the access point which is very ineffective once again, unless you buy a fancy $300 transmitter/receiver
+Aidan Morgan sir, nearly every wifichip is capable of running monitor mode. In this mode you can see the clients and their mac addres and all of the ap's and their mac addresses. Now all you have to do is make a network which can be done with nearly every wifichip and let people connect to it. Please get your facts straight before talking BS
Bas Makes No. that's literally exactly what I said you fucking moron. Read it. I said you can make a false network and have people connect to it. But you CANNOT monitor and just intercept packets with a normal wifi chip. Let me break this down If someone is connected to a secure network. And you are also on the same secure network, but not in complete control of the network, i.e. No access to the wireless router control panel then you cannot intercept someone else's packets. HOWEVER, you can make a false network that appears as the same SSID as said network and have people connect to that, which you can intercept. I'm studying to be a professional penetration tester. Google it before trying to act like I'm a dumbass
Isn't that kind of the point though? When looking for a hacker, who would you suspect out of these two; the casual looking guy with a monster laptop covered in stickers or the focused "hunt and peck typing" guy with a plain looking 3 year old laptop?
+TheTenthFirefly I don't think it stands out anyway, the other computers look almost the same (except for the black edges typical of Panasonic laptops of that era).
the best way to protect yourself is never to buy things from the net or do internet banking, just go to the shop or the bank for goodness sakes people.
Man in the middle attacks... So obvious to anyone with even a little bit of knowledge of cyber attacks, so inconspicuous to your average joe, they are beautiful. So easy it could be done on your phone as long as you can tether internet.
rikilii Have it delivered to a home that you know nobody is at and pick it up there. For example, have it delivered to an empty for sale home (remove the sale sign the day of the delivery).
How do you get the items? This scam seems to be missing a big part. I would guess that the police will be waiting for you to collect your stolen pool table
Then a bunch of fraudulent charges will appaer to that one address and a govt official with a warrant will pay him a visit forcibly giving him a free ride
if you use their credit card to purchase items online, how would you prevent being caught when actually RECEIVING the item? and wouldn't a close address (and/or YOUR address) be seen in the shipping address? ya you can pay for an item, but how can you get your hands on it without getting caught? -_-
There are ways around this, however lets downscale this for a second. Lets say we buy small things, £15 here, a cup of coffee there, most people wouldn't notice this on a bank statement.
Then explain to me this. I buy lots of things from amazon and other big websites. I lived in California when I started my account. I moved here to Texas and everytime I fill up gas or whatever i have to put my old zip code, Now that I bought my own house I have a different address than what the card says.. I haven't went to the bank to change my address b/c there isnt one here..I get direct deposit btw. so how come my card has an address from Cali, but I always enter the shipping address of my new home. how come yet I've never received a call?
Thats bullshit. You could be shipping an item to a friend, or you just moved and you still have your old billing address. I have done that hundreds of times and no issues. I don't know where you heard that but its complete bullshit.
robert karas I havent heard it from anyone, its a fact. I am telling you stores confirm with a phone call if the shipping address does not match the billing address. Not only that, but banks also decline the transaction unless you call them and tell the bank its not fraud so it will go through smoothly.
Ebargainsoutlet There is nothing wrong with using a different shipping address. I just did a purchase for my dad and have done so many times over without any issues. You don't need to go through paypal or any other bullshit.
i don't get it why use card online. U can pay via bank website fast transfer, most of them require secondary password like SMS. So in order to steal from U hustler would need to get your account login/password and hack into your phone.
This and other reasons is why I NEVER use any public WiFi network. I only use the WiFi at home. Anyone can log in to a public WiFi service and be malicious, or create their own with a laptop and some added hardware. If the owner of a WiFi network service is a malicious type of person he can run logs of all activity on his network, and then use the information for profit. He can also run software on computer that can monitor the activity in detail. Another person with a laptop can log in to a public WiFi service as like anyone else. If he has the utilities and skills he can attempt to get in to other user's phones or computers that are active in the system. If the other devices are not well protected they can be infiltrated. To have Internet service outside of your home that is safe, take a subscription with your mobile phone company. Most mobile providers can supply a mobile modem for your laptop. You can also have a mobile data plan with your cell phone that can allow tethering. This would make your mobile Internet a lot safer to use.
Jerry G. Laptop? 100€ used android phone can run full linux (desktop), create a wi-fi hotspot and do a lot of stuff (including MiTM) _100€ for used Moto G, I chose it because it can perform well enough for full linux_
Jerry G. Or if you have the brains you would back track the IP address an check it ! If the IP comes back different you wouldn't use that wifi gate way to surf the net! Hackers are smart
If you want to see more iconic scenes from The Real Hustle, SUBSCRIBE to our channel! ua-cam.com/channels/yRrxDbRD8OKEvVDwx3JvsQ.html
Hotel WIFI speed is the real scam
that's what I was thinking.
Get your ass to a Japanese hotel and see the difference.
That's if the chinese people haven't used it all up.
so true
Taylor p
"Paul and Jess have come to this hotel room for a bit of privacy" - great start
and then they test their equipment listen to that whole part with your eyes closed
I don't remember going to a hotel with paul....
I wouldn't mind Hijacking Jess's WiFi.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
She's a porn star
Rule of thumb: if the public network asks for personal details, get off that network immediately.
it steals.....you dont know what even * * DEL * * do you?
or how to make a simple hijack?
or deep web?
Our professional kid talking about "deep web" as it would be something glorious. Its not.
+Murgeologi correct. Its the big hellhole of the internet with no control on the info distributed
Warsilver MCDONALDS TOLD ME THAT
0:55 "look at my hand, it moves when I explain things"
lol
Haha awesome
Bubba Gurt 😂😂😂
A lot of people use hand gestures. What's the big deal?
I dunno. I just thought it was funny when they zoomed up on his hand to see his hand gesture. Like why? Haha.
people will laugh at this in the future
+MICHAEL STEPHENS
you're*
*****
nice copy + paste :p
*****
has he come back yet? then no.
*****
I feel you dude.
+Smart Android Kid Why did you think he copied and paste?
Who’s watching in 2019 and laughed when he pulled out the computer and said high tech
Moron
2021
like common sense why do they need your credit card for you to use there wifi?
to pay for it
+SURREAL Studios it's free u....just omg
At hotels it's not usually free
lot's of hotels offer free wifi
i would look at that first page and say no
I made $500 in one day off this Show
+dev theman lol
How
?
+Linus Did 9-11 He was joking
TwistLurk TV you peace of chit! Fuck of.
SIR PARRYMOPPINS PIECE OF *C H I T*
Seeing this now... 20 years old knowing the world and technology! Who the fuck puts in credit card details to get on WiFi... Instant no no.
Some people just really don't know any better...and/or just out of it: "Here's free Wi-Fi but enter your full credit card details to gain access!" It's not like you're registering on a porn site and they want/need some way of proving you're of legal age.
any turnip who would place credit card info onto an open network deserves all they get.
And not even try to connect to some of the other networks who could be free , right? :D
Nieriel Most certainly .
I never log into a network that asks me for a payment.. not because I'm smart, but because I'm cheap!
It served me well!!
Rule of thumb: Use a VPN... when on public networks. There are many free ones available, free or at throwaway prices.
+Phallusy then use a reliable one
*****
Use a reliable VPN. Many are available from your anti virus provider itself. If it too good to be true, it may be a dream.
Never use a free Vpn that's just asking to have all your dats logged and sold
Phallusy lol the vpn won’t do shit you still need to connect to the router first
How would a vpn help? You set up the vpn after connecting to a network. Nevertheless in this example you simply input credit card details on a webpage so a vpn has nothing to do with this. The vpn is used to make it harder to pinpoint your current network. Masks what network you are using, making it appear that you are connected through a different network for ex in Guatemala.
You sir just found out about vpn and that you can do dodgy shit with it and think you're a hacker of sorts.. Or you know more than i do about it. In any case the obvious solution is to make these transactions over trusted networks and have some common sense not to share details on a fucking hotel lobby.
This channel really helps me for in the real world. I really appreciate how they say how to avoid it and how it’s done. Thanks guys!
You know, setting up a payment gateway on a free wifi hub, and then actually charging the card for the amount you said you were going to charge (ie, instead of, like the video shows, buying stuff wildly in excess of the cost of wifi) would be a brilliant scheme. They were asked to pay $x for wifi, they agreed to pay $x for wifi, so when they see the bill for $x for wifi they'll think nothing of it. Meanwhile, the "conman" has the $x for doing almost nothing. Much safer.
those websites look straight out of 90's XD
ReachSkyla because they are
Mikee ur just 3+ years late
“Hidden cameras” that can get a perfect view of both Paul and the mark, aswell as the computer screen
they edit that in post...
WTF kind of idiot would log on to a hotel wifi using their credit card anyway? What kind of cheap POS hotel doesn't offer free wifi these days? And no F'in way would a legit hotel ever require credit card information as a security measure. At best they would just change their password every now and then and only give it out to guests.
this was in 2005
This is an old clip back then in high end hotels they provide good wifi for a price
Worst cinematographers. 0:48 - 1:16 Like, WTF is all that!? Keep it steady!
It doesn't matter if it isn't common for Wi-Fi networks to ask for your credit card information. That's obvious nowadays, but this video is pretty old.
However, you can still be scammed if you end up logging-in to a fake Wi-Fi network. They can redirect your web requests to fake versions of the sites that record your data (phishing). Also, if you are not using an encrypted protocol (HTTPS) your information could be stolen through a packet sniffer, even if you are entering it into a legitimate website.
So, to be safe:
1) Always ask some employee, not only for the Wi-Fi password, but also for the correct network.
2) When on a public network, be extremely careful with any and all private data you enter, be it full name, ID, Passport number, Credit Cards, Usernames, Passwords, etc.
3) Double check the website links to make sure you've entered the correct site and not a phishing version.
4) Always use the HTTPS version of every website.
5) Consider getting a VPN for extra protection.
I had also forgotten how powerful and thick wifi signals were back then. you did not want to get hit by one of those!
Who pays for WiFi????
These clips are 10+ years old , you did back then
You
I do. Because I thought about that, too. That Internet these days already theoretically is free. But: free WiFi is not secure. In Romania for example I wouldn‘t use it. Because they are professionalized gangsters there. (skimmers & credit card scammers)
There is a much easier way to tell if its legitimate. Put in a fake credit card number.
A legitimate paid wifi network will poll your bank for verification instantly. A guy intercepting the number won't know if it's fake untill he tries to use it.
Or you could put "I'm watching you" in the name slot and look around for people that look freaked out.
+Dave LeBlanc that makes sense.
+Dave LeBlanc or put in
Fuck You'); DROP DATABASE; --
Then reload the webpage.
What if their parked in the car or hotel room lol
The wifi at hotels suck anyway, I have unlimited data anyway 😂
LOLOLOLOLOL!
It's not unlimited data at maximum speed though, plus it's not free data, you're still paying a payment plan for it.
Till you hit what? 9GB? Then you’re capped to about 0.01mb... soooo
Most hotel wi-fi is super high speeds nowadays
An important thing is that on a public WiFi network, everyone can see everyone's traffic, except if it is encrypted (for example HTTPS). An attacker can sniff traffic without connecting to the network using monitor mode. And for HTTPS sites without HSTS, if you only enter the domain name like chase.com, and not chase.com, the attacker can keep the site from redirecting you to HTTPS, so he can still sniff you. (I was shocked that Chase does not use HSTS.) And never ignore certificate warnings, especially on public networks!
Solid advice, these sorts of attacks are much less likely now thanks to greater usage of HSTS, and extensions like HTTPS everywhere
so much easier to steal bank details in Watchdogs
Order it all to the house of someone you hate and make them look guilty
Is that Jus Reign lmao.
onlycec lmaaooo
Lot's of people asking about the delivery address. Have your item(s) delivered to an empty home that's for sale. Remove the For Sale sign the day of the delivery and pick up your item(s) as soon as they're dropped off.
It helps to pick the fastest delivery option (your not paying for it!) and to let the delivery company know it's okay to leave it on the front porch (or wherever).
"I would never ever send sensitive information... over wireless. *It's not safe*". That's not really true when everything is done properly though (proper encrypted communication over a secure identified network). That said, I still prefer wired connections. Wireless can frequently be slow. Plus obviously many people may do the proper verifications/precaustions for a trusted secure wireless connection.
I got scammed just like this yesterday, but Im a student and I didn’t have any money in my account luckily. In fact, the scammer felt so sorry for my broke ass he put money into my account.
Now THAT, is a solid laptop! also I remember when this was much easier to do
love how the guy at the end never mentioned using a vpn
What do you mean?
Imagine you have someone’s card details, you have £2000 to spend and the thing you buy is ....... a pool table
Why not? If they've done it alot before they probably have bought alot of other stuff already.
OR, you could just make sure https is in the location bar...
And yet people don't see his screen walking by with Credit card info
2:47 that guy in the turban was in the laptop scam. This show is the real scam
What do you mean?
Watch their "laptop scam" and you'll see the same guy. Obviously a part of their cast and not the public
Grammar Nazi Watch their "laptop scam" and you'll see the same guy. Obviously a part of their cast and not the public
Note the first guys initials are T.R.H as in The Real Hustle.
allornothing432, yeah because they totally are allowed hack into a randoms hotel wifi and steal private info.
The first mark's name just HAPPENED to have the initials T.R.H
This will never work in 2017. Google 'HTTPS'. You're safe.
It’s 2021 and this is hilarious.
That mark was fake (he was in on the scam). His name is T.R.Harper (TRH) - The Real Hustle. TRH is always the name/abbreviation the show uses as cover
yeah go shop and send it home so they directly know who stole the credit card LOL
Right? That's what I said.
the thing is .. u either send it to a nittys yard (a fene-in other words a junki) or pay for a post box for the packages to be sent to and give all the wrong details.. also use the card u have just gotten to pay for the post box iygm
It may be easy to purchase items with stolen card details but most companies only deliver to the cardholder's address. If you use the card to buy things like airline tickets that wouldn't work either because card account names won't match passport etc.
0:30 "I'm happy, you happy?
Cept all that network activity for his fake hotspot is on the hotel's network logs. You'd be better off using your phone as a private mobile hotspot, connecting your laptop to it, then using your laptop as a public hotspot with the same name as the one you're trying to fake. Your latency would be crap, but the signal would still be strong, which gets you the clicks. With no evidence left behind.
the problem with this one as far as the scammers go is that the things they buy would be delivered and that means that they are caught :)
if it was part of the hotels network, you wouldn't have to pay for it via credit card, it would just come as an added charge.
Your average joe doesn't always think of that, people are stupid and too trusting.
zwabTheRealOne Being a computer engineer I guess it's just common knowledge to me, yes, I guess the common individual would pay.
Fryklballs: I was thinking of that myself. most hotels I stay at have free wi-fi. I dont know about english cities or foreign countries. However any good sensible person should know that several wifi signals can be located in an area at any given time, and you should ask the hotel staff if you are having questions.
bmwsux6 MOST PEOPLE PAY FOR HOTELS WITH CREDIT CARDS SO THEY WOULD THINK THAT THE HOTEL REQUIRES A CREDIT CARD VERIFICATION ONLY TO VERIFY THEY ARE A GUEST NOT JUST A RANDOM PERSON TRYING TO GET FREE WIFI
THIS IS FROM BACK IN 2004 TIMES HAVE CHANGED SINCE THEN
What I wish they would add is how can a person defend him or herself from this scam
Other than be paranoid.
I don't know how many Wi-Fi networks you've connected to over the years but I would be seriously wary of any network that requires credit card details before granting access - especially in places where you already pay for other services (a room in a hotel, food in a restaurant)...
the 282 dislikes are the hotels watching
Also, VERY IMPORTANT.. use a VPN like hotspot shield to encrypt all the data sent and received, so it makes it harder for you to get robbed
Crap now i have to look for another way of hustlings! Thanks for telling everyone. (Lol)
Can this only be done in close proximity to the victim, or can the scammer do from one floor to another? You know,long distance away.
Where would you send the things you buy?
Poor oblivious people! ;(
I never pay for wifi in public.
This is the EASY way, but with the hard way you can capture network traffic and in some cases, get sensitive information or session cookies (info, that let's you log in to websites). You can also do MiTM attack, in which you can modify webpages the victim sees
_Sorry for computer-pepole if I made it too simplistlic_
1) No one is going to pay for the Wifi.
2) No one is paying via their credit card details online.
3) Credit card company will call to verify purchase, then cancel it.
4) It's the banks money, not the Mark's.
Man if this is not stagged my god the dude that connected to the wifi be like "HOLY CRAP MAGIC WIFI IT BOUGHT MY DREAM A POOL TABLE!!!!!"
how can i do this? i live in a apartment so letting my neighbors access my wi-fi for free would cost em!
Good point lol
could land you in prison? Go
Matthew Butterworth actually no. you need a special receiver for that or you need to have your computer act as the access point which is very ineffective once again, unless you buy a fancy $300 transmitter/receiver
+Aidan Morgan sir, nearly every wifichip is capable of running monitor mode. In this mode you can see the clients and their mac addres and all of the ap's and their mac addresses. Now all you have to do is make a network which can be done with nearly every wifichip and let people connect to it. Please get your facts straight before talking BS
Bas Makes No. that's literally exactly what I said you fucking moron. Read it. I said you can make a false network and have people connect to it. But you CANNOT monitor and just intercept packets with a normal wifi chip. Let me break this down
If someone is connected to a secure network. And you are also on the same secure network, but not in complete control of the network, i.e. No access to the wireless router control panel then you cannot intercept someone else's packets. HOWEVER, you can make a false network that appears as the same SSID as said network and have people connect to that, which you can intercept.
I'm studying to be a professional penetration tester. Google it before trying to act like I'm a dumbass
those laptops look absolutely tragic
Isn't that kind of the point though? When looking for a hacker, who would you suspect out of these two; the casual looking guy with a monster laptop covered in stickers or the focused "hunt and peck typing" guy with a plain looking 3 year old laptop?
no
+TheTenthFirefly Doesn't really answer my question though...
They'd be hiding in plain sight if they had just a mundane laptop. They're tragic nevertheless
+TheTenthFirefly I don't think it stands out anyway, the other computers look almost the same (except for the black edges typical of Panasonic laptops of that era).
Do the credit card company send the holder a SMS to confirm the online transaction first?
which episode and season is that?
Oh boy how the times have changed lol
the best way to protect yourself is never to buy things from the net or do internet banking, just go to the shop or the bank for goodness sakes people.
How would you have the tv delivered without being caught ?
pretty sure you're prompted to pay to use the internet after you connect to the wifi otherwise you'll just be looped back to the payment page anyways.
This should be called how to make money LOL
or just dont add in your credit card details when connecting simplez
Darn, this really slaps you on cyber-security
Man in the middle attacks... So obvious to anyone with even a little bit of knowledge of cyber attacks, so inconspicuous to your average joe, they are beautiful. So easy it could be done on your phone as long as you can tether internet.
Where does he have the merchandise delivered?
rikilii Have it delivered to a home that you know nobody is at and pick it up there. For example, have it delivered to an empty for sale home (remove the sale sign the day of the delivery).
Free wifi here - **asks for card details**
Did they return back money ?
How do you get the items? This scam seems to be missing a big part. I would guess that the police will be waiting for you to collect your stolen pool table
Your name made it funnier. xD
0:24 Is some kind of computer whizz but types at like 15 letters per minute?
I can't figure out if those guys are really doing this or its just for the show
Thank god I am credit card less
it's sad to know that there so many scammers in the world. like just stop
are you high?
+Momma's Muffins probably
+Momma's Muffins im not sure mabye its just a mountain dew hangover
Kerseili seems like it. remember, drink lots of water.
lol! closeup on the bandaid on his thumb!
Why were they *all* on Linux though? Including the guy on the MacBook...
lol'd at the interface being eth0..
Then a bunch of fraudulent charges will appaer to that one address and a govt official with a warrant will pay him a visit forcibly giving him a free ride
Just make sure SSL is enabled (green keylock)
Never use a place that has no free wifi. Never use these places to buy anything.
Paul and jess have come to this hotel room for a bit of privacy. I had my pants down before the narrator finished the sentence.
if you use their credit card to purchase items online, how would you prevent being caught when actually RECEIVING the item? and wouldn't a close address (and/or YOUR address) be seen in the shipping address?
ya you can pay for an item, but how can you get your hands on it without getting caught? -_-
You have it delivered to vacant homes and go retrieve it there. Happens all the time.
There are ways around this, however lets downscale this for a second.
Lets say we buy small things, £15 here, a cup of coffee there, most people wouldn't notice this on a bank statement.
Merchants check to see if the shipping address matches the billing address, if it doesnt they call or the transaction does not go through.
Then explain to me this. I buy lots of things from amazon and other big websites. I lived in California when I started my account. I moved here to Texas and everytime I fill up gas or whatever i have to put my old zip code, Now that I bought my own house I have a different address than what the card says.. I haven't went to the bank to change my address b/c there isnt one here..I get direct deposit btw. so how come my card has an address from Cali, but I always enter the shipping address of my new home. how come yet I've never received a call?
Angel Ramirez Illuminati
Thats bullshit. You could be shipping an item to a friend, or you just moved and you still have your old billing address. I have done that hundreds of times and no issues. I don't know where you heard that but its complete bullshit.
robert karas I havent heard it from anyone, its a fact. I am telling you stores confirm with a phone call if the shipping address does not match the billing address. Not only that, but banks also decline the transaction unless you call them and tell the bank its not fraud so it will go through smoothly.
Ebargainsoutlet There is nothing wrong with using a different shipping address. I just did a purchase for my dad and have done so many times over without any issues.
You don't need to go through paypal or any other bullshit.
but whatever you buy with the stolen cc info needs to be delivered somewhere, so you're leaving a trail, aren't you?
Well they just scammed me by making me watching a ad without the SKIP BOTTON
the last time i checked free wifi doesn't ask for credit card information
This doesn't work anymore at this time.
Since when do you have to Pay to use someone's wifi network?
What if the hotel is actually participating in the scam ? What do we do then ?
Cushpnk sue them, a hotel isnt exactly easy to pack up and get rid of
i don't get it why use card online. U can pay via bank website fast transfer, most of them require secondary password like SMS. So in order to steal from U hustler would need to get your account login/password and hack into your phone.
This and other reasons is why I NEVER use any public WiFi network. I only use the WiFi at home. Anyone can log in to a public WiFi service and be malicious, or create their own with a laptop and some added hardware.
If the owner of a WiFi network service is a malicious type of person he can run logs of all activity on his network, and then use the information for profit. He can also run software on computer that can monitor the activity in detail.
Another person with a laptop can log in to a public WiFi service as like anyone else. If he has the utilities and skills he can attempt to get in to other user's phones or computers that are active in the system. If the other devices are not well protected they can be infiltrated.
To have Internet service outside of your home that is safe, take a subscription with your mobile phone company. Most mobile providers can supply a mobile modem for your laptop. You can also have a mobile data plan with your cell phone that can allow tethering. This would make your mobile Internet a lot safer to use.
Jerry G. log in to = log into.
Jerry G. Laptop? 100€ used android phone can run full linux (desktop), create a wi-fi hotspot and do a lot of stuff (including MiTM)
_100€ for used Moto G, I chose it because it can perform well enough for full linux_
djekna N "log into" would be correct in a sentence such as "he threw the log into the pond". "Log in to" is correct in this context
Jerry G. Or if you have the brains you would back track the IP address an check it ! If the IP comes back different you wouldn't use that wifi gate way to surf the net! Hackers are smart
better advice always use your own internet services if you want to buy anything that is expensive rather than using hotel wifi
would Tor circumvent this issue?
get cheat engine and select the background processes like 'timer' and freeze the time to have infinite 30min free wifi
I've never been asked for my credit card details in any hotel WFI .If I am ever asked then I log off .
And as we all know, there is absolutely no way one can pretend to live in one adress while not realy living there. There is a reason these scams work.