Re: ECONOMY: The Absurdity of Merchant Account Requirements

Brian Atkins (brian@posthuman.com)
Mon, 31 Aug 1998 12:48:08 -0400

Just wait until you have to deal with chargebacks, and the fact that you basically cannot dispute them for net transactions. You will not believe how much fraud is going on out there right now...

my inner geek wrote:
>
> Let's say you have a newsletter article on a web page that is
> password protected. In order to profit from the newsletter, you wish
> to sell passwords, which provide access to the newsletter. The idea
> is to have an online, completely electronic process, for obtaining
> credit card numbers, dispensing passwords, and electronically
> crediting the personal bank account of writer.
>
> In order to have an automatic form on-line that processes credit
> cards, you need to have a "Merchant Account" at a bank.
>
> This is a policy that is very unfriendly to e-commerce.
>
> In the U.S. (Silicon Valley, in my case), to have a Merchant Account,
> the individual needs to register a "Fictitious Business Name" with the
> County Clerk. This process involves traveling to the Country Clerk's
> office, doing a database seach for a business name, filling out a form
> that is carbon-copied in quadruplicate.
>
> I went through this process last week, for "ifeden.com". First of
> all, it's absurd that I need to register this business name, since
> it's already registered with Internic, and is unique on the whole
> internet. Nonetheless, to use it as a business name for a merchant
> account, registry with the county is required.
>
> The process takes quite a while, since the County Clerk is not able to
> accept credit card payments, and does not have the name registry
> online. Here in Silicon Valley, the process still requires physical
> travel to the County Clerk's Office, in Oakland.
>
> Last week, I registered the name, for "FILING FEE" of $29.00. There
> is a terminal in the lobby of this large office in a grand courthouse.
> I had to use the antiquated data terminal myself, to perform the name
> check. After finding that it was not taken yet, I filled out the form
> in ink, waited in line for 45 minutes, then handed the form to a clerk
> in a window.
>
> The clerk checked the computer again, to confirm that the name wasn't
> used, then asked for my $29.00 cash payment, plus an additional $7.00
> for registration of the name "IMMEDIA Expert Systems". She took out
> her dated rubber stamp, and stamped all 4 copies of the form, then
> signed her signature.
>
> She gave me the three back copies (YELLOW, PINK & ORANGE), and kept
> the fourth (WHITE), which she added to a stack of others awaiting
> further processing. I asked the clerk if she entered the name and
> address into the database herself. She advised, "no, these go to the
> Recorder, who enters them into the database."
>
> Then she promptly told me that I needed to take the pink copy of the
> form to a newspaper within the next 30 days, or the registration would
> become null and void.
>
> Here's how the instructions read on the back of the form:
>
> "Within 30 days after the fictitious business name statement has been
> filed with the county cleark, the statement must be published in a
> newspaper of general circulation in the country where the principal
> place of business is located. The newspaper selected should be one
> that circulates in the area where the business is to be conducted. The
> statement must be published once a week for four successive weeks with
> five days between each date of publication. An affidavit of
> publication must be filed with the county clerk within 30 days after
> the completion of the publication. (Sec. 17917 B&P Code)"
>
> She advised me that this process should cost approximately another $35
> or so, to be paid to the advertising department of the newspaper.
>
> Frustrating enough, since I don't have a physical "place of
> business", I just wanted to have a way to compensate writers for
> posting articles on web pages, located in cyberspace.
>
> I went to the SJ Mercury News Advertising department, but they said
> they don't do this anymore. They gave me some suggestions for other
> newspapers to try.
>
> I went to the bank, and gave them the YELLOW copy, and opened a
> merchant account. I advised that checks would not be necessary, since
> the only purpose of the account was to electronically receive payments
> from selling passwords.
>
> So far, I have still not published the "FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
> STATEMENT" with a newspaper, so the whole thing may become null and
> void. I doubt that bureacratic mechanisms will trace their way back
> to the bank to cancel the account, but just in case, I'll keep trying
> to contact the newspaper to publish this.
>
> Unfortunately, I don't want to give out my home address, since it's
> common knowledge on the internet that you "never give out your home
> address". It will be interesting to see if the newspaper can publish
> this entry and send an "AFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATON" back to the county,
> without publishing my home address.
>
> To be continued...
>
> geek@ifeden.com
> _______________________________________________________
> <META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="NOINDEX, NOFOLLOW">

-- 
The future has arrived; it's just not evenly distributed.
                                                       -William Gibson
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