E-wallets, online banking, and cryptocurrency verified accounts are some of the most expensive illegal digital products for sale on the dark web. As of April 2023, details of a credit card with up to 5,000 U.S. dollars on balance could sell at around 110 U.S. dollars. Crypto accounts on N26, for instance, had an average selling price of 2,650 U.S. dollars. Social media followers can also be bought on the dark web, for example, at four dollars per 1,000 followers on Instagram. In turn, AirBNB.com verified accounts averaged 300 U.S. dollars.
Average prices in 2018 for U.S. stolen ID, personal data and hacked accounts for sale on darknet markets. It’s ordered by type of credential, in descending order by average sale value.
Summary dataset showing average prices in 2019 for hacked log-ins for most well-known online accounts for sale on darknet markets. The dataset includes accounts for notable U.S. and UK online brands and shows price change compared to 2018 as a percentage.
Average prices in 2018 for UK stolen ID, personal data and hacked accounts for sale on darknet markets. It’s ordered by type of credential, in descending order by average sale value.
This statistic presents the average price of stolen credentials on dark web marketplaces as of February 2019. The average price of an Amazon account login was 30.36 U.S. dollars. Stolen bank details were worth 259.56 U.S. dollars.
Among a wide range of illegal products for sale on the dark web, some of the most notable are hackers' services in attempting malware or distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks, which can cause large-scale online traffic disruptions and website outages. As of March 2023, premium-quality malware attack services could sell for up to 4,500 U.S. dollars per 1,000 installs on dark marketplaces or vendors. In turn, a DDoS attack on an unprotected website lasting for a month had an average price of 750 U.S. dollars.
Updated average prices in 2019 for UK stolen ID, personal data and hacked accounts for sale on darknet markets. It’s ordered by type of credential, in descending order by average sale value.
https://www.thebusinessresearchcompany.com/privacy-policyhttps://www.thebusinessresearchcompany.com/privacy-policy
Global Dark web Intelligence market size is expected to reach $1.66 billion by 2029 at 21.4%, segmented as by solution, dark web monitoring tools, threat intelligence platforms, data analysis software, reporting and visualization tools
Average prices in 2019 for U.S. stolen ID, personal data and hacked accounts for sale on darknet markets. It’s ordered by type of credential, in descending order by average sale value.
Average prices in 2018 for UK stolen ID, personal data and hacked accounts for sale on darknet markets. It’s ordered by type of credential, in descending order by average sale value.
Certain forged documents in physical format usually sell at a higher average price than scanned versions on dark web marketplaces. For example, an original Maltese passport could sell for 4,000 U.S. dollars as of March 2023, while passports from various other European Union countries averaged 3,000. Regarding scanned versions, the price for a Alberta driver's license could reach 140 U.S. dollars.
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
This data set was made from an html rip made by reddit user "usheep" who threatened to expose all the vendors on Agora to the police if they did not meet his demands (sending him a small monetary amount ~few hundred dollars in exchange for him not leaking their info). Most information about what happened to "usheep" and his threats is nonexistent. He posted the html rip and was never heard from again. Agora shut down a few months after. It is unknown if this was related to "usheep" or not, but the raw html data remained.
This is a data parse of marketplace data ripped from Agora (a dark/deep web) marketplace from the years 2014 to 2015. It contains drugs, weapons, books, services, and more. Duplicate listings have been removed and prices have been averaged of any duplicates. All of the data is in a csv file and has over 100,000 unique listings.
It is organized by:
Vendor: The seller
Category: Where in the marketplace the item falls under
Item: The title of the listing
Description: The description of the listing
Price: Cost of the item (averaged across any duplicate listings between 2014 and 2015)
Origin: Where the item is listed to have shipped from
Destination: Where the item is listed to be shipped to (blank means no information was provided, but mostly likely worldwide. I did not enter worldwide for any blanks however as to not make assumptions)
Rating: The rating of the seller (a rating of [0 deals] or anything else with "deals" in it means there is not concrete rating as the amount of deals is too small for a rating to be displayed)
Remarks: Only remark options are blank, or "Average price may be skewed outliar > .5 BTC found" which is pretty self explanatory.
Though I got this data from a 3rd party, it seems as though it originally came from here: https://www.gwern.net/DNM-archives Gwern Branwen seems to have complied all of his dark net marketplace leaks and html rips and has a multitude of possible uses for the data at the link above. It is free for anyone to use as long as proper credit is given to the creator. I would be happy to parse more data if anyone would like to request a specific website and/or format.
This data could be used to track drug dealers across different platforms. Potentially find correlations between different drugs and from where/to they ship in the world to show correlations between types of drugs and where drug dealers that supply them are located. Prices can estimate drug economies in certain regions of the world. Similar listings from 2 different vendors can perhaps point to competition to corner a market, or even show that some vendors may work together to corner a market. There are quite a few opportunities to do some really great stuff to find correlations between illegal drugs, weapons, and more in order to curb the flow of dark net drug trade by identifying high risk regions or vendors. I can potentially do a new parse of other websites so you can find correlations across websites rather than just within Agora.
The largest reported data leakage as of January 2025 was the Cam4 data breach in March 2020, which exposed more than 10 billion data records. The second-largest data breach in history so far, the Yahoo data breach, occurred in 2013. The company initially reported about one billion exposed data records, but after an investigation, the company updated the number, revealing that three billion accounts were affected. The National Public Data Breach was announced in August 2024. The incident became public when personally identifiable information of individuals became available for sale on the dark web. Overall, the security professionals estimate the leakage of nearly three billion personal records. The next significant data leakage was the March 2018 security breach of India's national ID database, Aadhaar, with over 1.1 billion records exposed. This included biometric information such as identification numbers and fingerprint scans, which could be used to open bank accounts and receive financial aid, among other government services.
Cybercrime - the dark side of digitalization As the world continues its journey into the digital age, corporations and governments across the globe have been increasing their reliance on technology to collect, analyze and store personal data. This, in turn, has led to a rise in the number of cyber crimes, ranging from minor breaches to global-scale attacks impacting billions of users – such as in the case of Yahoo. Within the U.S. alone, 1802 cases of data compromise were reported in 2022. This was a marked increase from the 447 cases reported a decade prior. The high price of data protection As of 2022, the average cost of a single data breach across all industries worldwide stood at around 4.35 million U.S. dollars. This was found to be most costly in the healthcare sector, with each leak reported to have cost the affected party a hefty 10.1 million U.S. dollars. The financial segment followed closely behind. Here, each breach resulted in a loss of approximately 6 million U.S. dollars - 1.5 million more than the global average.
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License information was derived automatically
Darktrace stock price, live market quote, shares value, historical data, intraday chart, earnings per share and news.
Subscribers can find out export and import data of 23 countries by HS code or product’s name. This demo is helpful for market analysis.
Subscribers can find out export and import data of 23 countries by HS code or product’s name. This demo is helpful for market analysis.
Subscribers can find out export and import data of 23 countries by HS code or product’s name. This demo is helpful for market analysis.
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E-wallets, online banking, and cryptocurrency verified accounts are some of the most expensive illegal digital products for sale on the dark web. As of April 2023, details of a credit card with up to 5,000 U.S. dollars on balance could sell at around 110 U.S. dollars. Crypto accounts on N26, for instance, had an average selling price of 2,650 U.S. dollars. Social media followers can also be bought on the dark web, for example, at four dollars per 1,000 followers on Instagram. In turn, AirBNB.com verified accounts averaged 300 U.S. dollars.