Jamie
June 19th, 2002, 09:18 PM
There are many evil :twisted: people out there who like to use stolen credit cards to try and purchase online. We just had an order today that someone placed with a stolen credit card. They gave an address in New York, but they where sitting somewhere in Saudi Arabia. Here is some info that may help you avoid credit card fraud.
- Always check to make sure that you have received payment before shipping. I do this via emails from our payment processor, 2Checkout.com. The emails sent from the cart are just so you know you have an order, but it's not a done deal until you have the cash! - Check the order thoroughly for anything unusual, especially if the order is for a large amount of $$$$!
- Check the IP address that the order was placed from, and compare it's geographical location to the location of the address provided in the order info. The IP address placing the order is available in the email that gets sent to the merchant. You can then copy it, and paste it into the form at this site, and find out where it is registered:
http://www.geektools.com/cgi-bin/proxy.cgi
If you get an order and the address is in New York, and the IP address they placed the order from is in a place far from there, then a red flag should go up. If you have any suspicions, call the person. If you have a true merchant account, you can call your support, and get the telephone number for the card issuing bank. You can then call the bank, and ask them if the card was reported stolen.
- Always check to make sure that you have received payment before shipping. I do this via emails from our payment processor, 2Checkout.com. The emails sent from the cart are just so you know you have an order, but it's not a done deal until you have the cash! - Check the order thoroughly for anything unusual, especially if the order is for a large amount of $$$$!
- Check the IP address that the order was placed from, and compare it's geographical location to the location of the address provided in the order info. The IP address placing the order is available in the email that gets sent to the merchant. You can then copy it, and paste it into the form at this site, and find out where it is registered:
http://www.geektools.com/cgi-bin/proxy.cgi
If you get an order and the address is in New York, and the IP address they placed the order from is in a place far from there, then a red flag should go up. If you have any suspicions, call the person. If you have a true merchant account, you can call your support, and get the telephone number for the card issuing bank. You can then call the bank, and ask them if the card was reported stolen.