In April, the FBI seized the Genesis Market, a black marketplace for stolen credentials that was launched in 2017. Genesis Market was an invite-only marketplace, but it was not complex to find invite codes online.
One of the most interesting features offered by the platform is the access to âbrowser fingerprintsâ that allow crooks to impersonate victimsâ web browsers, including IP addresses, operating system data, time zones, device info, session cookies, and more.
The price for a stolen account was very cheap, paying a few dollars crooks were able to use it for a specific period. Genesis Market provided access to accounts of the most popular services, including Amazon, eBay, Facebook, Gmail, Netflix, PayPal, Spotify, and Zoom.
The seizure is part of a law enforcement operation codenamed Operation Cookie Monster.
As reported by BleepingComputer, on June 28, the alleged admin of Genesis Market (GenesisStore) announced on a cybercrime forum that the platform was available for sale.
“A buyer been found and a deposit has been made. The store will handed over to a new owner next month. Accounts on the forums will not be transferred, the new owner will create new accounts if necessary.” reads the GenesisStore‘s announcement on the hacker forum.
Cybersecurity firm Flare learned that the sale included the overall infrastructure of âthe store with all the developmentsâ and its data, including clients’ details.
The data offered by the administrators included:
On Thursday, GenesisStore revealed that the deal is going to be complete by ânext month.â
BleepingComputer added that the admins would not hand over the accounts on the forum.
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(SecurityAffairs â hacking, Cisco)