You Are Only Worth This Much on the Dark Web

cyber crime

Chances are that you’ve heard about criminals buying or selling stolen personal information on the dark web. That’s not news, but did you know that the items listed go far beyond credit cards or Social Security numbers?

In fact, your entire online identity can be bought for $1170 according to the Dark Web Market Price Index from Top10VPN, an independent VPN review site.

The research is based on tens of thousands of listings on three of the most popular dark web markets (Dream, Point and Wall Street Market). That research focused on dark web listings featuring stolen IDs, hacked accounts, and additional personal information and calculates the average sale prices in U.S. dollars.

Criminals buy and sell personal information, including online banking details, credit or debit card details on the dark web. You may have not known that they can also buy passports along with logins and passwords for email providers, mobile carriers, retail stores, social networks, ride sharing sites, streaming sites, stolen dating profiles, and even food delivery sites.

“While login credentials for various sites can seem harmless and have a generally low price point on the dark web, people shouldn’t underestimate their value to unlock very valuable consumer data,” said Brian Stack, vice president of engineering at Experian Consumer Services.

“Many consumers reuse the same logins and passwords across their accounts. Unfortunately, the dark web has many tools for sale that allow hackers to run countless variations of user ID and password combinations, so they can take a fairly benign email account and then unlock a consumer’s bank account.”

Experian offers a free dark web scan to see if your email address lives on the dark web. Also, the Experian IdentityWorks® membership provides dark web monitoring, alerts and a view into your credit report and FICO®Score so you can keep an eye on things and get a heads up on potential red flags for identity theft. You can also check out identity protection products for your entire family.

Also, these days the average person is managing 191 passwords, according to LastPass—which are a lot of accounts that hold a lot of personal information that can be used to form an online identity and, in turn, be hacked and sold.

Types of Personal Information on the Dark Web

The following is a breakdown of different types of personal information and what it’s worth to hackers:

Just as in the regular economy, supply and demand has a role on the dark web markets. Prices for personal information can change, especially when a large-scale data breach happens—all you should really focus is making sure your information is not on the dark web.

How Can I Protect Myself From the Dark Web?

Even though data breaches are outside of your control, you can still make sure not to share any personal information across your accounts unnecessarily and maintain healthy password practices.

If you do learn your data is breached, change your passwords on any account using the same email address. Also, you should review all credit card statements each month to flag fraudulent charges immediately and get a new card number if needed.

For more information, visit Experian.com.

Matt Tatham is the manager of content insights and data analyst at Experian Consumer Services, a division of Experian, the nation’s largest credit bureau.

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