Online Fraud Solutions
Credit Card Fraud Articles & Best Practices
Starting up an online business involves a lot of work and commitment for the merchant; confidence in the product,
building and developing the web site, advertising and promotion are just a few of the activities that will make
the business grow and succeed. Therefore, when a merchant sees his profits being eaten up by fraudsters and chargeback
penalties, it is understandable he wants to do everything in his power to put a stop to credit card fraud.
Although accepting credit card orders on a website allows merchants to automate online sales and reduce costs,
the real target is to control the menace of fraudulent online credit card transactions.
More often than not, the credit card holder doesn't lose out if their card is used in a fraudulent transaction;
the credit cards issuing bank covers the loss and reimburses the customer since they are keen to keep their
custom and encourage more spending on the credit card as it generates big profits for them. The customer is
often liable for the first $50 of a fraudulent transaction but issuing banks will often return all monies as
a show of good will. The merchant takes most of the costs of fraud in the loss of the product or service,
chargeback penalties and transaction fees, never mind the time spent in checking transactions, chasing up
payments and reporting the crime.
Credit card fraud runs into billions of dollars each year and increases as internet usage grows and more
new businesses venture online. In recent years credit card companies have had to look seriously at the
issue of credit card fraud and deploy methods that will curtail fraudulent transactions.
One of the most important features for a website is the anti-fraud system; make certain it is suitable
for your type of business. No business is the same, the product and type of customer attracted to the
website will be different in every case and the anti-fraud tools should reflect this. Merchants will experience
varying levels of crime depending on the type of product on sale, geographical location and the merchants
own knowledge of fraud.
The larger credit cards such as Visa and MasterCard have a programme whereby they monitor the amount of
chargebacks produced by each merchant, if merchants exceed their given limit then they have to pay penalties.
Banks impose penalties to encourage merchants to be more diligent when checking credit card transactions.
If a merchant does experience many chargebacks, then the banks will discuss the situation with them and
offer advice and security tips on techniques to reduce the number. These can include making a record of the
e-mail address, card number and phone number of those who have caused the chargebacks; observing how regularly
an individual card is used; limiting the amount one card can charge without authentication and supplying a
merchant with a customer service telephone number to call if there is a query. The credit card providers
research into the areas where security is the weakest and use this information to get merchants to take
extra precautions at these points.
Internet credit card fraud will continue to grow and as an online merchant there is a responsibility to
utilize an anti-fraud system and start the implementation today. Each time a merchant receives an order
from a new customer there is the chance that this will be a fraudulent transaction. The merchant has to
decide; a possible fraud or revenue? Costs in advertising and promoting the website and products are high
and potential customers might turn out to be valuable life-long shoppers, setting rigorous fraud policies
might scare them off and limit profitability. Look online for an effective payment gateway provider with a
high security anti-fraud system.