I never said your procedure was illegal, Just not safe for the retailer making the sale. If you wish to take the chance by doing it that way it's your choice. I used to do it that way until I got hit with a massive chargeback and fee. As I said, if that has never happened to you, you may not understand. Believe me, once you get hit you do change your ways. The processor I was using at the time was First Data, one of the largest CC processors in the world. Many small processors go through First Data's system. There are only a few processors that make up the backbone of CC processing and First Data is one of them. Things are changing rapidly in the CC processing world because of fraud on a massive scale. And everyone is reevaluating the way they do things. Something that was considered OK a year ago, may be considered taboo now.
I was just making sure that anyone reading these posts doesn't think that taking a customers number by email(even just 8 digits)and putting it through their processor themselves, is the proper way to do things, it's not. The customer needs to do this themselves.
Now maybe if you're a hobbyist selling a few things you make yourself on the internet, you may not worry about losing a couple of dollars. But if you are retailing for a living losing any money at all hurts the bottom line, and could potentially put you out of business.
Everyone complaining about Paypal needs to understand that if your customer inputs their info to Paypal to pay for their transaction, and Paypal verifies it, you get the money guaranteed. That is why I prefer to use them for all online sales. I believe Google checkout is the same, but I'm not sure.
Don't take this the wrong way Peter, I'm not insulting you. And you certainly have the right to do things the way you want to. I'm just trying to save someone else from going through the same headache I went through by sharing the knowledge I learned the hard way.
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