Porn games free no credit card

Hate to shill, but there are plenty of free banking apps that have free debit cards

Cash App, Venmo, Paypal, etc. Just get a free debit card without adding your own to their system

I have a Cash Card, so it's the only one I can definitively say works for that, but ultimately you can totally do this

Fake Cards, Real Stories
December 30, 2008 1:02 PM   Subscribe

Christmas is finally here. Thank you.
posted by gman at 1:07 PM on December 30, 2008

The Websense category "Illegal or Questionable" is filtered.
posted by desjardins at 1:14 PM on December 30, 2008

I LOVE YOUR SITE BUT I AM IN NEED OF CREDIT CARDS THAT I CAN USE IN BUYING THINGS AND POSSIBLY MAKE RETURN BY HELPING ORHPANAGE HOMES THE LESS PRIVILEGE.THE SUFFERING IS TOO MUCH LETS TRY TO HELP ONE ANOTHER PLEASE MAKE IT SNAPPY WITH LOVE .
posted by Potomac Avenue at 1:15 PM on December 30, 2008 [1 favorite]

My first forays into programming was to implement the Luhn algorithm to generate 16 digit numbers. I believe I got the algorithm from Phrack magazine... Each language I played around with I'd implement the Luhn algorithm and then write a Guess That Number game. Java, C, Pascal, bash scripting. Ah the memories. I even had a Geocities page with an applet that generated random numbers. The fact that it never got taken down is probably a good testament to the fact that no one ever saw it.
posted by ChrisHartley at 1:32 PM on December 30, 2008

H15 13375P34|< 1Z D3F1[13N7Z0RZ.
posted by Xezlec at 1:32 PM on December 30, 2008

During my script kiddie phase in '99, I had a CC generator program for DOS. I tried a number on a paid porn site just to test the program. Hilarious nostalgic find... thx 4 posting it.
posted by yoHighness at 2:04 PM on December 30, 2008

delmoi: You and I both know that, but did 1990s Geocities?
posted by ChrisHartley at 2:20 PM on December 30, 2008

I was laughing my ass off reading the "fool proof method" when suddenly the seriousness of its implications dawned on me. These people CAN get credit cards. These large credit institutions extended predatory forms of credit to these very people, and now, our country is imploding because of it.
posted by JimmyJames at 2:37 PM on December 30, 2008

Also, the numbers may be useless now, but they weren't always: there was an infamous application called CreditMaster that just used the algorithm to generate lists just like in this post, except at the time it was made (94-95 or so), the numbers would actually work in a lot of places, particularly early pay-porn sites. Going even further back (early-mid 70s), the old TAP/YIPL newsletter would publish the updated credit card number algorithm (before the Luhn algorithm was adopted) every year, and that was enough information to generate working numbers.
posted by DecemberBoy at 2:58 PM on December 30, 2008

As others have said, this shit really won't work anymore. They have these things called computers now that will verify the card numbers actually mean something, that the names match, etc. Technology!
posted by chunking express at 11:15 PM on December 30, 2008

Man, and I thought the real money was in NINJA HELOCs.
posted by dhartung at 8:54 AM on December 31, 2008

Yeah, that authorization system can really be a pain with debit cards. I recently had an issue with fraudulent transactions on my debit card. My bank's fraud department caught the anomalous transactions, contacted me to confirm and disabled the card, but I still had several hundred dollars tied up for two weeks as I awaited their expiry.
posted by Samizdata at 12:23 PM on December 31, 2008

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Porn games free no credit card

Anyone who unloaded an Xbox 360 or PlayStation 3 during the dying days of Circuit City had best hope they deleted all their private information, including credit card numbers and home-made porn, because it turns out that Circuit City didn’t.

Kotaku was contacted by a reader who works in a refurbishing facility that bought some of Circuit City’s stock of pre-owned Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Wii, DS and PSP systems when the company went under. The terms of the deal specified that the systems would be in working order, “with maybe a few components missing.” It may or may not come as a surprise depending on your own particular bias toward the company but Circuit City apparently failed to live up to its end of the bargain: 217 of 227 Xbox 360 and 167 of 205 PlayStation 3 consoles received in the deal were “non-functioning.”

Bad enough in itself, perhaps, but things got even uglier when the center started repairing and testing the consoles. When the systems were taken online to check their connectivity, many of them suddenly started popping up with friend requests, chat requests and invitations to play games. Technicians found friends lists, photos, “sexy home videos” and more – including credit card details.

That Circuit City didn’t wipe the systems after taking them in or before shipping them out to other dealers isn’t particularly surprising in light of the company’s circumstances at the time. The final few days of Circuit City were probably something like the fall of Saigon and employee diligence, not one of the company’s strong points even at the best of times from what I understand, would have gone completely out the window. The level of indifference would have been positively astronomical.

But there’s enough responsibility to go around here and while the Circuit City’s indifference is understandable, that of the people who brought these units in without wiping them clean first isn’t. Let this be a lesson: This is your information and ultimately it is up to you, dear reader, to ensure it doesn’t end up floating around out there like a dead goldfish flushed out to the sea. It’s no excuse for Circuit City’s big-time ball-drop but blithely trusting your sensitive and valuable data in the hands of large, faceless corporations is just begging for trouble.