Forum Moderators: buckworks
The domain is registered on a US (PA) address, and hosted in the USA as well. I guess it's all carded.
Any idea if there is a place to report such things?
I guess contacting Visa is trouble since you have to explain lots of customer support stuff what is going on, and the provider might as well also not understand. Is there some government organization that actually understands these things, and does all of it automatically (shutting down servers, contacting Visa/MC, etc)?
I'd also contact the hosting company for the web site - look up the domain registration information at samspade.org or elsewhere and you can eventually figure out the hosting company.
It's a shame that Visa and MasterCard (the cause of such problems) do not have an investigation bureau or something, where merchants report fraud such as this one. But yet, they always pretend they are doing whatever they can to stop and prevent fraud. But this is another story I don't want to go into today ;-)
I've reported the case and also contacted the billing department of the hosting company, assuming that the server/domain is carded as well. They took the page down almost immediately.
"Visa and MasterCard (the cause of such problems) do not have an investigation bureau or something" ... "But yet, they always pretend they are doing whatever they can to stop and prevent fraud. "
Yes, whatever happened to what seemed in my mind to be a great solution - SET (secure electronic transactions) where the buyer effectively re-confirmed their purchase with a PIN?
In my dreams: Since every merchant I've ever spoken to seems to have problems in this area and none more so than for online transactions, couldn't a group of us get together and holding up the example of systems such as PayPal, etc. put some pressure on?
OK I know Paypal is opened and often funded with CC but as it and deposits grows its power will too.