4 of a kind
Repeated violations of forum rule 1.16 - troll
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2009
- Location
- New York
First of all charge backs are not automatically enforced regardless what it may be for. The credit card company will first ask you the reason over the phone. If they believe your complaint is justified they will charge back your funds from the merchant and hold the money in escrow pending an investigation.
The customer has to send a written statement explaining why they believe their entitled to a charge back. The credit card company then forwards a copy of this statement to the merchant, and gives the merchant a certain amount of time to respond. If they don't respond in the given time frame the customer automatically receives the full charge back, ending any further investigation.
If the merchant responds, then the credit card company sends a copy of that to the customer. The credit card company then makes a decision like an arbitrator. They may request additional information from either of the parties or just close the case and side with one or the other.
If charge backs were that easy to do, you would have a hard time getting merchants to except credit/debit cards in the first place.
The process I explained above was from my one and only personal experience about 7 years ago with a retail customer. In addition my response was extremely precise and detailed, and the credit card arbitrator sided with my company. The money was already returned to my account before they even notified me.
I doubt quicktender would want to respond explaining an illegal online gambling transaction, at least for USA customers.
I doubt this process has changed much since my experience, since I heard from others involved with similar charge back claims recently.
In addition, regardless who should win the case, the merchant will send documentation explaining their finding. I'm sure this document could be utilized to clear any negative reports being made against them.
The customer has to send a written statement explaining why they believe their entitled to a charge back. The credit card company then forwards a copy of this statement to the merchant, and gives the merchant a certain amount of time to respond. If they don't respond in the given time frame the customer automatically receives the full charge back, ending any further investigation.
If the merchant responds, then the credit card company sends a copy of that to the customer. The credit card company then makes a decision like an arbitrator. They may request additional information from either of the parties or just close the case and side with one or the other.
If charge backs were that easy to do, you would have a hard time getting merchants to except credit/debit cards in the first place.
The process I explained above was from my one and only personal experience about 7 years ago with a retail customer. In addition my response was extremely precise and detailed, and the credit card arbitrator sided with my company. The money was already returned to my account before they even notified me.
I doubt quicktender would want to respond explaining an illegal online gambling transaction, at least for USA customers.
I doubt this process has changed much since my experience, since I heard from others involved with similar charge back claims recently.
In addition, regardless who should win the case, the merchant will send documentation explaining their finding. I'm sure this document could be utilized to clear any negative reports being made against them.






