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I have absolutely no reason to trust credit companies as the unbiased vanguard of consumer protection. Signing an affidavit merely begins a process where the charge might go away, and I would expect that the process will get slower while ending up in the customer's favor less often.



You've obviously never accepted credit cards as a merchant. The process is heavily in the customer's favor.

It is incredibly hard to win as a merchant in any kind of dispute. The burden of proof is on the merchant not the customer.

The merchant pays a fee regardless of the outcome, and if you end up with more than 1% chargebacks your account is cancelled. The net effect is that any merchant who is doing this on a regular basis won't be accepting credit cards for long.

Additionally, the system is so far in the customer's favor that it's causing a fairly large fraud problem for merchants. It's bad enough that my small business won't accept credit cards for very large purchases unless the customer has a history with us.


Agree. Been a merchant in a few businesses dating back pre-net.

You need documented signed proof, in general and without that the charge is not only backed out but you get hit with a $25 or so charge back fee. And yes to many chargebacks say goodbye to the account.

We spot fraudulent charges and proactively issue a void before the consumer finds out, lest we get hit with the charge back fee as well.


> You've obviously never accepted credit cards as a merchant. The process is heavily in the customer's favor.

A company I used to work for had, some years back, made its way onto MATCH (merchant blacklist) for one of the four major credit card companies. Why? It accepted a legitimate (!) payment from a customer who was at the time under 'investigation' by the credit card company for fraud. (Obviously, this was not known to my company at the time that they accepted the payment).

Apparently, we even showed the credit card company that we had provided the appropriate services in exchange for the payment, so there could be no allegation of us helping them 'embezzle' the money. No luck - we were placed on the blacklist for seven years (give or take).

The punchline: that same credit card company had no problems issuing us a credit card in the company's name - not just once, but three times since we were placed on the blacklist.


That's only an issue if you care if your account is canceled. Plenty of 'merchants' are simply there to funnel stolen credit card information and turn it into cash.


Except that consumers almost always win such disputes and they are really not very burdensome. So bitching about this process is really just bitching.




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