Owen DeLong wrote:
On Dec 12, 2008, at 3:14 PM, Nathan Stratton wrote:
On Fri, 12 Dec 2008, Joe Abley wrote:
On 2008-12-12, at 15:02, Martin List-Petersen wrote:
It's a misconception of some muppets, especially in IT related products, that forget, that a lot or IT professionals do travel all over the world and usually have a credit card in their home country. Pure and utter nonsense.
Or perhaps the hassle of dealing with stolen US credit card numbers from clients outside the US costs far more money than you could hope to make back with the purchases of US nationals travelling overseas?
Could well be muppets, but surely there are other possibilities.
Sad but true, we have had to turn off signups outside the US because of that very problem. Yes, I am sure we lose some sales, but in general it is not worth the fraud costs.
Why don't the fraudsters just use Open US Proxies?
You can be sure, that the people wanting to defraud merchants know all these tricks and use them. The verified by visa password option is a far better solution, but I've not seen many US merchants supporting that yet. Instead they're relying on outdated geoip data or ask people to fax a copy of their credit card. /Martin -- Airwire - Ag Nascadh Pobal an Iarthar http://www.airwire.ie Phone: 091-865 968