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Can I hire someone to hack a phone and how much they charge for hacking?

by Genuine Hackers Brilliant hackers
The internet is like a dark alley with shady people hiding in the shadows.

Do you suspect your wife of cheating on you? If you don't mind crossing legal or ethical boundaries, there's a hacker on the dark web who can give you access to her email and social media accounts.

Hackers will now be found without having to dive too far through the depths of the dark web — they're still very easy to detect.

For example, on Fiverr, you can easily employ an ethical hacker for as little as $5. These so-called "white hats" assist in protecting the website from malware threats by finding and plugging security gaps.

Dell's SecureWorks discovered in a 2016 study that the underground marketplace is "booming" because hackers are "expanding their hours, guaranteeing their jobs, and expanding their services" to attract buyers.

If you need a hacker or are just curious about the market, here are seven hackers for sale right now and how much they could pay, according to the SecureWorks report and other online ads.

The second most frequent question is how much money they ask for their services, to which hackers usually reply that they want to be paid in bitcoin. Prices are given in US dollars, although they can vary.

1. DDoS Attack is also known as Distributed Denial of service attack:
Charges $5 - $25 per hour
According to Kaspersky, you will spend as little as $5 for a five-minute assault and as much as $400 to overload a website for a whole day, disabling legitimate users. According to the SecureWorks survey, the price is $5 per hour or $30 per day.


2. Bank heist online:
Charges $40 and up
According to the SecureWorks study, you'll pay a hacker 1% to 5% of the money you withdraw from an online bank account in exchange for gaining access to it.

According to the survey, to hack a US-based account and steal $1,000, you'd have to pay a hacker about $40, and accounts with smaller balances result in higher fees.

3. Rewards points transfer: 
Charges $10 to $450
The cost of stealing reward program points from someone's account is determined by the number of points in their account.

Hacks for hotel loyalty points start at $10 for 50,000 points and go up to $200 for 1,000,000 miles, according to the SecureWorks study.

On American airlines, 200,000 frequent flyer miles arrive at $60. For $450, you'll get 1,500,000 miles and almost definitely a round-the-world trip. (possibly to a country with which there is no extradition treaty).

4. Hijack Instagram Account: 
Charges $129
According to SecureWorks, the monthly hacker fee for gaining unauthorized access to an account on Instagram, Twitter, Snapchat, or other social networking sites is $129.


5. Hijack corporate email: 
Charges $500 and up

According to SecureWorks, the cost of hacking a Gmail, Yahoo, or Hotmail account is $129, but the cost of hacking a business email account is $500 per inbox.

Phishing scams involving company employees often involve sending fake emails posing as a trusted associate in order to steal usernames, passwords, financial records, or other confidential information.

According to the FBI's Internet Crime Study, corporate email theft cost businesses $676 million in 2017.

6. Break into a cell phone: 
charges $21.60/month or more
You can use the Copy9 software to hack and monitor an Android smartphone (version 4.0 or later) if you want to keep an eye on it. You can also Hire a hacker to do this for you.

Copy9 has 18 different capabilities, including GPS monitoring and sound capture, to name a few. The software records the information on the stolen phone and though it is turned off, and once it is linked to the internet, all monitored data is transferred to your account.

One downside of the software is that in order to install the spyware app, you must keep the target phone in your hands. According to one Quora user, hiring a hacker would give him or her remote access to your devices, which may cost between $500 and $5,000.

7. Hack into Facebook
charges up to $40,000

Hacking Facebook is permitted, but only if you notify the website of your findings. Facebook has a Bug Bounty scheme that pays hackers to identify vulnerabilities and report them to the organization so they can be fixed.

For the best bug report in June, a new Bug Bounty promotion gave a trip to the DEFCON festival. In June, the company said that it awards prizes ranging from $500 to $3,000. However, according to Fortune, Facebook paid Russian researcher Andrew Leonov $40,000 for discovering a flaw that enabled malware to hide in digital images in 2017.

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About Genuine Hackers Advanced   Brilliant hackers

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Joined APSense since, January 30th, 2021, From london, United Kingdom.

Created on May 5th 2021 02:01. Viewed 353 times.

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