Forum Moderators: buckworks
Any help would be appreciated.
Dan
Now if you were selling tobacco, porn, and fully automatic deer assault rifles (only available in the USA), then I would expect a high fraud rate.
If its a vice, expensive, and easy to pawn, then it will incur a high chargeback rate.
not that i know of, however, the issue really affects merchants not clients, for a client it is easy to get all the money recovered they just phone up the credit card company and report the fraud.
... it is the merchant who actually misses out and looses money.
Identity theft is where a criminal gets access to a person's social security number, birth certificate, driver's license, etc - not just a credit card. This takes fraud (and the suffering) to a whole new level when the crooks can re-route your mail, finance a new car or home, and completely ruin your credit rating. Identity theft can also take several years to unwind.
As topr8 mentioned, simply having a card stolen puts more burden on the merchant than the cardholder. The cardholder is fully protected by law (in many countries). It's the merchant that gets the chargeback if the card is shown to be used fraudulently.
Steve
<added>While banks constantly complain of 'billion dollar' fraud losses, I can't see where they have lost a nickel on stolen credit cards - but the merchants certainly do.</added>