New on LowEndTalk? Please Register and read our Community Rules.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.

Comments
So people here and from NodeSeek have all made it very clear for you that what you did is completely inappropriate, do you still want to 狡辩?
why 228,is a node can host 228 VMs max?
https://law.moj.gov.tw/ENG/LawClass/LawParaDeatil.aspx?pcode=C0000001&bp=47
I have a amd la compute vps which is high cpu steal time recently
Hosthatch refund me and this is the end
But now still not refunded,so this isn't the end
The end is nigh. Just go away.
Bro commit crime and illegal activity and still wish for law protect him
How about @Oscar_Inc give me your CC detail so i can use it ?
What if that money is use to cure someone cancer ? Someone got kidnapped and asking for billion then found out they out they missing dollar ?
Just wanted a quick explanation for those who don't know the truth:
OP is a repeat credit card theft offender, a pathetic child flaunting his transgressions.
The only real victim here is HH.
Once again money is just money,it does nothing more or less than itself
Money only works for only one use case:equal exchange of things
Tell it to yourself when you become the victim, and somebody else is the offender.
The only question is, do you own that money?
Don't blur the issue.
This topic just goes to show how important items like 3D Secure is going to be for card payments moving forward - All banks/card vendors should start supporting it and shops should start enforcing it on all payments.
How does one reach a state of mind where credit card fraud has been so normalized that you'd actually argue that it should be considered business as usual and get mad when your fraudulent transactions are rejected?
A state of lifelong delulu
3D Secure is an Europeans thing.
In America we use tokenization i.e. Apple Pay.
You need fingerprint to authorize payment.
That is cringe.
This happens when someone has been doing it for a long time, and it has become routine, or the norm - a carder.
Before MJJs come stealing our finger -
Apple Pay is incompatible with chopped off fingers.
At best, you can knock us unconscious and use the still attached finger to buy a chicken.
Once the finger is cut, it expires in about 5 minutes, after which Apple Pay will no longer work.
I am well aware of that - I do think you underestimate a bit how many US people actively use Apple pay for online purchases, from the abt 7500 US customers we have there's only a fraction that actually use it and instead use their card directly.
Besides that, adding another layer on top that works outside of a specific ecosystem is only a bonus imo - 3DS works whether you have Apple or Android, whether its in apps, online or some other place where you are not there physically.
I am not saying that it has to be 3DS worldwide, but card providers needs to push for 2FA of somekind to start being a standard on cards imo.
The Apple Pay "Card" is a virtual number and it's CVV code changes everyday.
This depends on whether the checkout occurs on a phone or a computer.
I use Windows and Linux computers that do not directly integrate with Apple Pay, so that I would not be using Apple Pay if I'm purchasing on a computer.
I do many of my shopping, including VPS and domains, on cellphones.
If the Apple Pay or Google Pay button is prominent, I'll definitely use it.
Apple Card has a virtual number with charging CVV.
Apple Pay supports more than the Apple Card.
Merchants receive a one-time token, without full card number.
How did i manage to miss this exemplary nut case?
I missed this too. I fell asleep instead of browsing LET...
You got lost in the data forest.
That's why I keep my collection of chopped off fingers in the freezer.
Well you're not scammer you are just an a$$h#le. Someone is having nightmares and hard times due to you and you're proudly enjoying it
Actually my point exactly - Apple pay is great, but it works in a limited set scenario and it does nothing to protect you from your card being exploited by someone finding it on a darkweb forum.
3D Secure or any kind of 2FA build directly into the card will protect you no matter what scenario you are in (Virtually all).
As an EU company this is getting more prominent and I wish the rest of the world would follow, for us we are dropping support entirely for card payments that do not support 2FA by the end of the year, as a merchant the risk of accepting money from a stolen card is just too high for it to be worth it.
If 2FA was standard on card payments, like fx 3D Secure in Europe, then it would have stopped OP from using a stolen card
While that's certainly true 3D Secure is massively annoying and comes with a shift in responsibility in case of abuse. In the classic CC scenario the issuer will foot the bill on fraudulent charges but with 3D Secure the risk gets transferred to the user as the system is supposedly foolproof, so any kind charge is thought to be the fault of the user. Not to mention that the last time i've had to use 3D Secure the signup process was as shady as it gets (some form on a non-descriptive domain hosted in France with what looked like a cut out logo, so i had to call my bank to check this wasn't some kind of phishing attempt - not my idea of a positive experience when you are in a hurry to make a payment). For me personally missing 2FA is a major selling point for CCs not only from a usability standpoint but also because of the additional risk put on the user.
I think that depends largely on how it is implemented, we might be spoiled here in Denmark - We have a national system that are used to 2FA logins to everything GOV related, the same app is used for 3D Secure, it quite literally is a 3 second thing done in an official government controlled validation app - Now, I am not saying everything is perfect, but fraud online is an ever increasing thing and 2FA helps you, whether it is passwords or cards, I think we can agree that you are more protected from having your card abused than not having it?
As someone who's worked with this for over a decade I don't really share your view on the risk being put on the user - You are just as well protected, infact even more protected by having a card that supports 3DS (as an example) and actively using it, there's no scenarios, atleast not here that have changed due to 3D Secure, you can dispute, chargeback and get your money back on the same exact terms as you've always been able to.
Chopped off fingers will be fine with all those eye balls in a stew!