The financial services world felt the same pre-9/11. Since then FINRA and SEC regulations enforce "Know Your Customer" rules that require extensive record keeping. The regulations now are quite burdensome. Given that usage of "cloud" resources could be used for DDOS and other illegal activities, I wonder how long it will take companies to realize that if they don't do a good job of self policing, the result will be something they would prefer not to have happen. ---- Matthew Huff | One Manhattanville Rd OTA Management LLC | Purchase, NY 10577 www.otaotr.com | Phone: 914-460-4039 aim: matthewbhuff | Fax: 914-460-4139 -----Original Message----- From: Joel Jaeggli [mailto:joelja@bogus.com] Sent: Thursday, May 29, 2008 9:09 AM To: Dorn Hetzel Cc: nanog@nanog.org Subject: Re: amazonaws.com? Dorn Hetzel wrote:
There is a really huge difference in the ease with which payment from a credit card can be reversed if fraudulent, and the amount of effort necessary to reverse a wire transfer. I won't go so far as to say that reversing a wire transfer is impossible, but I would claim it's many orders of magnitude harder than the credit card reversal.
To paraphrase one of my colleagues from the user interaction world: "The key to offering a compelling service is minimising transaction hassles." I encourage all my competitors to implement inconvenient hard to use payment methods....
A mere "court subpoena" wouldn't even be remotely sufficient. The person wanting their money back would pretty much have to sue for it and win. Heck, people that get scammed and send their money via western union can't even get their money back... People who sell physical goods that get shipped internationally to places where they can't get them back from have been dealing with irrevocable payment forms for a long, long time, and those are generally wire transfers.
Once that guy in Frackustan has my widgets, I need to make darn sure he can't take his money back :)
So, yeah, there would be some customers for whom the couple of business hours it take their wire to go through (that's a pretty typical time from my actual experience) would be longer than they would want to wait for their port 25 or other "risky" service to be enabled, but really, how many is that going to be. We're not talking about the wait for ordinary customers who don't need those particular services that tend to be problem children, and we're not talking about existing accounts of long standing, just about a barrier for the drive-by customer who wants to use services and then not pay the cost when they violate the AUP...
On Wed, May 28, 2008 at 11:53 PM, Peter Beckman <beckman@angryox.com> wrote:
On Wed, 28 May 2008, Barry Shein wrote:
On May 28, 2008 at 21:43 beckman@angryox.com (Peter Beckman) wrote:
On Wed, 28 May 2008, Dorn Hetzel wrote:
I would think that simply requiring some appropriate amount of irrevocable funds (wire transfer, etc) for a deposit that will be forfeited in the case of usage in violation of AUP/contract/etc would be both sufficient and not excessive for allowing port 25 access, etc. Until you find out that the source of those supposedly irrevocable funds was stolen or fraudulent, and you have some sort of court subpoena to give it back.
I don't believe there is a way for you to outwit the scammer/spammer by making them pay more of their or someone elses money. If you have what they need, they'll find a way to trick you into giving it to them. Are you still trying to prove that Amazon, Dell, The World, etc can't possibly work?
Amazon and Dell ship physical goods. Amazon Web Services sells services, as do I. Services are commonly enabled and activated immediately after payment or verification of a valid credit card, as is often expected by the customer immediately after payment. Shipment of physical goods will almost always take at least 24 hours, often longer, enabling more thorough checks of credit, however they might do it.
And even with the extra time to review the transaction and attempt to detect fraud, I'm confident Amazon and Dell lose millions per year due to fraud. The reality is that the millions they lose to fraud doesn't affect us because a Blu-Ray player purchased with a stolen credit card doesn't send spam or initiate DOS attacks.
At least not yet; those Blu-Ray players do have an ethernet port.
By your reasoning why don't the spammers just empty out Amazon's (et
al) warehouses and retire! Oh right, they'd have to sell it all over the internet which'd mean taking credit cards...
Now you're just being rediculous. Or sarcastic. :-)
I am a big, big fan of assessing charges for AUP abuse and making some
realistic attempt to try to make sure it's collectible, and otherwise make some attempt to know who you're doing business with.
Charging whom? The spammer who pays your extra AUP abuse charges with stolen paypal accounts, credit cards, and legit bank accounts funded by money stolen from paypal accounts and transferred from stolen credit cards?
If you are taking card-not-present credit card transactions over the Internet or phone, and not shipping physical goods but providing services, in my experience the merchant gets screwed, no matter how much money you might have charged for the privilege of using port 25 or violating AUPs. That money you collected and believed was yours and was in your bank account can be taken out just as easily 6 months later, after the lazy card holder finally reviews his credit card bill, sees unrecognized charges and says "This is fraudulent!" And there you are, without your money.
Getting someone to fax their ID in takes extra time and resources, and means it might be hours before you get your account "approved," and for some service providers, part of the value of the service is the immediacy in which a customer can gain new service.
Beckman --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peter Beckman Internet Guy beckman@angryox.com http://www.angryox.com/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------