Reducing Fraudulent Transations - 5
Simple Ways To Protect Yourself
by Joe Duchesne
The money being spent online is steadily growing. With billions
of dollars being spent each year online, the opportunity to make
money on the internet has never been bigger. Unfortunately, with
that opportunity come people who want to make money in less than
honest ways. We're going to look at some concrete ways you can identify
fraudulent transactions and save yourself a lot of chargeback fees,
money and grief.
Get more information from prospective customers.
The more information you have to work with, the better your chances
are that you will be able to positively identify fraudulent transactions.
At the very least, you need to make sure you get a customer's name,
credit card billing address, phone number and the IP address of
the computer currently accessing the order form. You should also
get a valid email address. This email address should not be one
that comes from a free email service.
Fraudulent transactions occur more frequently from certain
countries.
The first thing you should know is that certain countries are more
prone to fraudulent transactions than others. If you get an order
originating from one of the following countries, you should be suspicious
and do more digging. Some of these countries include: Ukraine, Indonesia,
Yugoslavia, Lithuania, Egypt, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey, Morocco,
Vietnam, Russia, Pakistan, Malaysia, Nigeria, Israel, Iran, Cameroon,
Gambia, and Ghana. This doesn't mean that every transaction from
any of these countries is definitely fraudulent. But you should
be very suspicious.
Confirm the address of the customer.
The first thing I do when I get an online order is to check the
phone number of the customer against a reverse phone number directory.
The majority of my orders come from the United States and Canada.
Phone numbers from these countries can usually be entered into reverse
directories to find out the address that phone number belongs to.
If I can't get a match for the phone number it servers as a red
flag and warrants more investigation.
Lookup the customer's country and city of origin
I've already outlined a long list of countries that should be suspicous
to you. How do you determine if your customer placed the order from
within one of these banned countries? Simple. You cross reference
their IP address with an IP lookup database that can tell you what
country they are in. The city they are from and sometimes even ISP
they use! If you handle only a few orders a day, you can use an
excellent free service at IP2Location.com. If you do handle more
volume, IP2Location.com also offers subscription packages at various
prices.
Once you determine the country of origin, if it doesn't match the
country the customer listed with their billing information be very
careful. Yes, it is possible that your customer could be travelling
away from home. It is much more likely that their credit card information
has been stolen and it is being used fraudulently. A mismatch between
the country reported by IP and the billing address is a big red
flag.
Don't let customers use free email addresses.
A free email address is so easy to setup at most free email services.
The odds of your being able to track down the person that registered
that free email address are next to none. If at all possible, block
all known free email services. The most common include Hotmail,
Yahoo, Mail.com, and Gmail. If you can't block free email addresses
in advance, consider a free email address a red flag. A utility
you can use to determine if an email address is a known free email
is dnsstuff.com. Look towards the bottom left of the page that comes
up.
Don't ship a product until you are sure.
If two or more red flags go up, beware. If you ship a product from
a fraudulent transaction, you will very likely be slapped with a
chargeback from your credit card company and lose the money from
the good. Be skeptical of all orders until everything checks out
to your satisfaction. If in doubt, refund the purchase. Too many
chargebacks will result in the cancellation of your merchant account.
Who needs that?
A little diligence can go a long way to helping you prevent loses
from fraudulent transactions. With a little knowledge, you can greatly
reduce lost profits due to fraud.
This article was written by Joe Duchesne, president of http://www.yowling.com/,
Yowling offers free ecommerce shopping carts with their web hosting
plans. Copyright 2005 Yowling. Reprint Freely as long as you provide
a clickable link back to my website from this resource box.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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