AICC has received a number of complaints from US citizens
who believe Indonesian purchasers using stolen or phony credit cards have
defrauded them. Unfortunately, major credit card companies list
General Tips:
1.) Educate yourself on
fraudulent activity by reading this page and any other references you may find.
Diligently check your orders and alert your personnel to be observant to suspicious
situations.
2.) Use the Address
Verification System (AVS) if your merchant account supports it (
3.) Add a message to the
cart display that you are "fraud smart", and pursue fraudulent orders to
the full extent of the law. A message as simple as "We screen diligently
for credit card fraud " may be enough to cut
fraud attempts in half.
4.) Do not accept
international credit card orders over $250 without completing ALL investigative steps below.
Do not accept large dollar amount credit card orders under any circumstances. Telephone domestic buyers who order over $250.
5.) Be careful of
REMAILING SERVICES! There are places in the
6.) Be careful of Hotel addresses. A good trick to catch those is to
search Google for the numeric street address, street
name, and zip. Most lodging addresses are on the web these days, so you can
find these.
7.) For international
or large orders- Ask for photocopies of both sides of the credit card.� This will deter many fraudulent buyers who
have stolen only the card strip data (�skimming�).
8.) Use the
HTTP_USER_AGENT and REMOTE_ADDR code on order forms. This line works with most form
handlers such as FormMail, cgiemail
and others. The exact syntax varies with the form handler, but it provides
information on the computer used to send the order, including the IP address.
The IP address can then be traced
to it's owner - usually an ISP. You can then contact
the ISP System Administrator and inform them of the illegal activity.
Members are provided
an automated way to do this. Check the documentation for your particular form handler
or cgi script for implementation of this input field.