Confessions of a carder
By Alexey Malov
As soon as there was a first bank card, there was a man who stole money from it. And he was called a carder. And to this day this man is alive and what he started and called “carding” is growing and developing throughout the whole world. End of the 90’s. Russia, that has completely shed its Soviet skin, is thunderously crashing into the epoch of market economy. People, who have now felt the taste of money, are starting to rake them in and share the country between each other. It seemed that everything in the motherland was already divided, but the new genius of the financial swindles and machinations is growing and it needs a niche. It’s these kinds of people who are becoming the first carders in Russia.
The Robin Hood of the modern era, the great carder, still being hunted by the Interpol. A man, shamelessly stealing from the Western banks: Izya Piterskiy. It was his story that this book is based on.
AUTHOR WOULD LIKE TO THANK
— Volodya, Inga, Fara, CheMa for pushing me to write this book
— My LJ friends for supporting me through the writing process
— Zhenya Garin and Dima Kivenko for helping me in all of my Internet beginnings
— Irochka, Nikita, Sasha and Ludmila for just being there
— The reader for holding this book in your hands right now
I had an acquaintance once, maybe a friend, even. Nobody knew his name or his last name, everyone just called him Izya. It’s not really known how it started. Some say that it came from the English word “easy”, some think that it’s a Jewish name (abbr. from Israel), yet others suggest that it actually came from Saint-Petersburg abbreviation SPb (if you look at the English/Russian keyboard and notice how English letters match the Russian one, then you get “ызи”, which kinda sounds like “Izya”), but even Izya himself probably does not exactly know how It came about anymore. His nickname replaced his last name. Piterskiy. So there he was, Izya Piterskiy, a carder, who always had a pile of cash and never thought about tomorrow. His favorite catchphrase was “Even Alla Borisovna (Pugacheva)* says that you had to live by the present, and she hasn’t just heard it on the grapevine!”
But, one of these gloomy St. Petersburg days Izya disappeared. That happened to him, he could disappear for a week or even for two. But this time when he was gone, I thought it was forever. I had all kinds of thoughts about his fate, starting from arrest and ending with murder or an accident.
But then just a bit over a year has passed and I got this unusual number on my caller ID. It was Izya! He said that he missed me a lot, but it was going to be a long time until we get to see each other again. He was alright and he was through with carding. All my questions were met with a rather strange response:
— Once in a few days, I will send you one letter. Whether you are going to publish them or not – you decide. Just make sure they reach those who need them or are simply curious. And now I am ready to put these letters forth before your judgment. I only edited them a bit, so that you can better understand this mysterious and beckoning, though at the same time dangerous and criminally punishable world of carding.


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