Barry Shein wrote:
not to excuse this, but... it's not a simple problem. The 'bad guy' rolls up to the website, orders 200 machines for 20 mins under the name 'xplosiveman' pays with some paypal/CC and runs his/her job. That job happens to create a bunch of email outbound. It could be a legitimate email service outsourcing their compute/bw needs to AWS, it could be 'pick-yer-bad-spammer' ... AWS really can't tell until after when the complaints roll in. :(
Oh rubbish, it's a trivial problem.
You verify the payment method in advance and make it clear in the agreement to use the resources that any of the following activities (list, define...) will be billed at a steep rate (e.g., $100 per spamming complaint) and make some reasonable effort to ensure you can collect that, like do an authorize on their credit card (that's what hotels do to reserve but not charge typically $1000 or whatever on your card when you check in.)
It's trivial, using your systems to spam is a cost, make sure at the very least you get paid for it.
And 6 months later, a chargeback shows up because the cardholder claims their card was used fraudulently. The bank will most likely side with the cardholder if you challenge it. How can that loophole be closed? ~Seth