Here is what your stolen data is being sold for on the dark webCredit/Debit card detailsPayPal accountsGift cardsPassport scansTicketsHotel loyalty programsEmail ids and passwordsGaming accountsCloud accounts for IaaSHBO GO accountsSports network streaming service accounts

Credit/Debit card details

A hacker gets around $5 per record for basic account number and expiration date details, which is nothing when you think some of the hacks that have got hundreds of thousands of these records. More comprehensive information can go for $30 per US record, in cases where the data would be expected to be stored in databases for repeat customers, including billing address, CVV2, SSN, etc. Further, the equivalent information can go up to $45 for European details. Even a sole proprietorship that only does business in a 5 mile radius possibly has enough credit card numbers on file to be worth the effort.

PayPal accounts

Depending on the balance, details on customers’ PayPal (and similar) accounts can go from a low of $50 to as high as $300 per record. That’s mainly scary, as PayPal usually ties to a checking or savings account.

Gift cards

Gift cards are going from between 50 to 65% of their nominal value whether stolen directly or created deceitfully. For individuals, this is basically bad whose gift cards are targeted, as they lose out totally since there is usually nothing they can do to get the monetary value back.

Passport scans

Do you wonder that RFID case is a silly treat? Radio-frequency identification (RFID) uses electromagnetic fields to automatically identify and track tags attached to objects. For instance, an attacker can just walk through an airport with a scanner in their bag, long before they would need to clear security, and that they can sell scanned data at up to $2 per record. As a result, it would be better if we can protect all our cards.

Tickets

Plane or train tickets can go for $10 of face value, and can be easily replicated from online images. Be careful before you Instagram the tickets to your dream vacation, or you could be facing a nightmare!

Hotel loyalty programs

Loyalty programs of well-known hotel chains’ can go for as little as $5 per record to as much as $20 per record. Since you make reservations for others or can gift points, and no one ever reads those monthly points statements too carefully, somebody could easily see the world using someone else’s programs and they wouldn’t come to know about it until it’s time to book their own vacation.

Email ids and passwords

The market for compromised email accounts has dropped. While back in 2007, a hacker could get up to $30 for a single email account, it is like $10 for 1000, on the high end today. Since it is very easy to make people click on the links that install malware on their systems, which can be used to spam others, it makes no sense in getting creds to use the accounts directly.

Gaming accounts

It is a bad idea to use a lame password on your WoW account, as a stolen gaming account can go for $10 to $15. Once inside, accounts are basically burgled and the virtual goods are sold for profit, leaving your level 27 Ogre bankrupt and out on the virtual street.

Cloud accounts for IaaS

Attackers are leveraging cloud resources to launch attacks, host malware, stand up servers, and get access to more data stored online. On any IaaS service, an admin account could go for $7 to $8 per record. It is strongly recommended to use multi-factor authentication (MFA) for admin accounts. In this space, every single service provides MFA as an option!

HBO GO accounts

Accounts for the popular private cable channel’s streaming service can go for around $10. However, it is guessed that the price could have doubled now since the Game of Thrones Season 6 has debuted!

Sports network streaming service accounts

Accounts used to get access to online streaming of sporting events can go for around $15 per record, depending on the sport, as nobody likes blackouts in their local market. So, where do the bad guys sell all of this information? There are countless options available to them, from the “Dark Web” to direct handovers to bigger or more organized criminal components. It’s comparatively easy to do this in places like Russia, China, and Brazil, you could perhaps find a place very easily where you can connect anonymously to sell what the information you have got, if you are online and using a service like Tor. While some require a referral from a trusted member, others just need a definite number of stolen accounts be “paid” immediately as the cost of admission. Nevertheless, if you see that your company’s data has definite value on the black market, it means that you are a target, just like everyone else.