- Joined
- Sep 28, 2010
It's the "banking code", more of a voluntary arrangement. Scammers can empty your bank account simply by getting hold of your account number, sort code, and name on the account. There is nothing in place to check that you have given specific permission for the transaction.
casinos running chargebacks on ewallets is easy, as the ewallet will return a payment made by a merchant on request, without even informing the player, let alone allowing them to dispute the matter. It is uncommon, but cases have arisen here.
During the Betfair incident, a Portuguese player was paid out, and 2 days later had the money taken back from his BANK, not Betfair account. The bank said it should not have happened, but it nevertheless DID happen because the system runs on trust. There is nothing in place to actually block such a snatch back of a transactions by the payer's bank.
It even happened to my Niece's husband over his salary payment. They paid two lots in, and then decided he was not entitled to the amount representing overtime and unused holidays, so simply took it back out of his bank account later the same day, leading to a financial "crunch" for the family. The fact this was against the banking code didn't stop it happening. It clearly CAN be done, and the reason it is done by big companies is to take the advantage in a dispute by forcing the "little person" to take the legal initiative and take the company to court, rather than the company having to go to formal dispute in order to have the "little person" accept that the money needs to be returned.
Betfair would have had to go to court in Portugal and win a case for recovery against this player, but they decided to exploit the system and snatch the money back, which left the player having to fight a dispute through the system. He was told it shouldn't have happened by his bank and the countrie's regulators, but they could do nothing to help because it HAD happened, and had no powers to order the return of the money.
I was quite astonished to read that banks would pay back monies to merchants, so I have just spent the best part of an hour ringing up the 4 banks I have accounts with, and where applicable, speaking to my personal manager, here are the results........
Barclays, RBS, Natwest, LLoydsTSB - Neither of these four would return any monies whatsoever to any merchant unless authorised by me, the only time any of the aforementioned 4 banks would get involved with debits, are if/when wages are deposited and an identical duplicate amount has been paid, and all four had very similar protocols in place for if this happened, each had one similar aspect, I would still be notified and could contest this, but the cash would remain frozen until an amicable decision had been reached, I will hasten to add, three of those accounts are business ones.
I never even played on SV very often, as I never seemed to ever win anything so gave up, but was just so horrified at what happened to these people.
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