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I'm generally the sort of person who would dig through a dumpster for miles, but this seems like an incomprehensibly silly thread. The tone of the OP is not unlike a small child saying "Boy I have a great big secret!" and then running out of the room in an effort to generate inquiries.
On top of that, if the "secret plan" in question is "Find a small business ignorant enough to allow you to bend them over the counter to the tune of $30 per 1000 miles" I'd have to say that's reprehensible. The Wal-Mart thing didn't bother me, and you could argue that is a double standard. But Wal-Mart is a monolith run by people who would whore their mothers out for an extra nickel in profits, whereas this scenario involves people who are probably your neighbor. I have no idea who runs the local Wal-Mart - probably some computer program in Bentonville, Arkansas. But the local pharmacist lives down the street from me, and I don't think I feel like f'ing him out of any money for miles. |
Originally Posted by nako
No one has yet brought up the fact that, aside from the fact that these purchases are technically against the policy of virtually every single money order merchants - these mom and pop stores are losing money on each and every transaction. Even if a merchant is getting a very favorable credit card merchant rate of 2 percent, the people exploiting this are causing the merchant to spend, possibly, hundreds of dollars per month in fees on transactions that they only earn a few dollars at the most.
(Consider 20,000 miles = $20,000 in money orders. The merchant paying 2 percent eats $400 in fees on those transactions. And the 2 percent is a fairly high-level business - many smaller businesses may pay an extra percent above that.) Given the sheer amount of loss involved for the merchant, and the fact that money order companies generally disallow the usage of credit cards for MO purchases, I think there is very little justification for anyone who knows these facts, yet persists in buying money orders from small merchants. Doing it from Wal-Mart with gift cards, IMO, was bad enough. This one, given the ultimate victim (the small business owner), is inexcusable. Mike NWA-DTW |
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Given the sheer amount of loss involved for the merchant, and the fact that money order companies generally disallow the usage of credit cards for MO purchases, I think there is very little justification for anyone who knows these facts, yet persists in buying money orders from small merchants. Doing it from Wal-Mart with gift cards, IMO, was bad enough. This one, given the ultimate victim (the small business owner), is inexcusable. Mike[/QUOTE] Pretty amazing response to me. Let's see Value mags gives away miles worth more than the $ involved, NO BEEF, A privately owned Amerisuites gives up rooms for .01 per night NO BEEF, Tickets to Iceland for $61 and NO BEEF. I guess we all better check with you before we decide what is inexcusable and what is ok with you. How about a 5 chain local grocery that gross over $5 mill a month is that one ok with you??? Or maybe a party store with 3 outlets thats been in business for over 75 years, is that ok with you?????? Get off your High Horse Nako. If they want to close it down they will and can. |
Originally Posted by NWA-DTW
I'm a fairly new poster, but I've lurked for quite some time. I don't know what they were thinking or what you think for that matter. I highly doubt the thought of ripping off small Mom and pop businesses is what they had in mind. They are after the miles. (Stay with me on this tangent please.) We all know those FF programs, as well as most all other loyalty programs, are a necessary evil. This site is dedicated to playing that game as best we can. I know a lot of us enjoy flying, and obtaining those extra miles is great. I don't have an answer on how to fix loyalty programs that our country so heavily favors. Although I feel criticizing this guy so harshly was wrong. I strongly believe in the best loyalty program out there...quality.NWA-DTW
What next? Government intervention to protect stupid business owners? |
Originally Posted by nako
No one has yet brought up the fact that, aside from the fact that these purchases are technically against the policy of virtually every single money order merchants - these mom and pop stores are losing money on each and every transaction. Even if a merchant is getting a very favorable credit card merchant rate of 2 percent, the people exploiting this are causing the merchant to spend, possibly, hundreds of dollars per month in fees on transactions that they only earn a few dollars at the most.
(Consider 20,000 miles = $20,000 in money orders. The merchant paying 2 percent eats $400 in fees on those transactions. And the 2 percent is a fairly high-level business - many smaller businesses may pay an extra percent above that.) Given the sheer amount of loss involved for the merchant, and the fact that money order companies generally disallow the usage of credit cards for MO purchases, I think there is very little justification for anyone who knows these facts, yet persists in buying money orders from small merchants. Doing it from Wal-Mart with gift cards, IMO, was bad enough. This one, given the ultimate victim (the small business owner), is inexcusable. Mike Firstly, yes, there have been people in here who have touched on the fact that the merchant may be paying fees. Also, some of these small stores may be ok with it as long as the fee they charge for that money order covers their cost, so there's an answer to that too. We also don't know all the facts about this entire gig yet because all Ingy has done is wake us all up to the thinking that there IS or MAY BE some way available out there to do this stuff still--whatever it may be... Again, I have not found it and I do look. Wish he'd just come out and SAY IT and stop being so cryptic (or is that part of the muse of this gig?) Furthermore, we do not yet know IF these merchants even know if they are paying a fee (beyond what they would have anyway, when charging any purchase) so as long as it is a purchase, who cares? I also suggest that many of us users do not even know nor care if fees are being paid because we do not pay them ourselves. What I mean by that last remark is this: If store #1 pays $1 per CC transaction and store #2 pays $2 per CC transaction, are you and I wrong for going to store #2 and "forcing him" to pay more fees? Should we HAVE TO BE cognizant of THEIR fee structures whatever they may be? NO! Now, yeah I do agree on this one: small business owners should be given a break and I would not wish to screw them over--knowingly or unknowingly--but my theory on all this mile/money order stuff still is this: If policies or current practices in any given store or with any given gift card or credit card allow a certain transaction to take place, then as long as they do, it is not illegal or wrong on my part to do that transaction! If you wanna tell your local store owner that you noticed he is getting abused on money order fees because you like the guy, go ahead. But these same mom and pop stores also need to buy air conditioners, get rid of that cat smell coming from the back room, stop smoking in the face of customers who come in, be friendly to new comers and outsiders who do NOT know the local set that always hang out in that store, have more products I like, charge less for sodas, stop letting their 12 year old kids work the counter because they always bag it wrong or get the money screwed up, use real receipts, and do away with the $1 fee to run the lottery machine when you elect to quickly do a automatic quick pick instead of filling out the card to give to the clerk to pass it thru the machine's coder. (there's a liquor store near my office who charges this and so I do not go in there if I need a lottery ticket once and a while. All of the above means I should not and do not care HOW they process my money order, I just want the thing and I use my CC because I also happen to get miles for it. And that's another thing: Why is it wrong to do any of this just because THEY (the store or a CC company, etc) could know that I may get miles for it? Do they have any idea how hard it can be to redeem those things? If they did, they should pay US a fee for accepting them! Does any of what I am saying make sense to anyone? I hope so!! I say there is NOTHING wrong with buying money orders, trying to churn gift cards and get miles, trying to find stores (big or little) that allow these things to happen, or thinking of and posting ideas for ways to streamline it. We are not immoral as customers to give it a whirl and go try to find out how it works. If anything, I have found that some of these companies who put forth the marketing about their gift cards and credit cards can often be the wrong doers! that's because sometimes, when these gift card companies and banks abruptly change their rules, it is actually THEY who do the "wrong" move by suddenly altering terms for the sake of stopping people in their tracks and holding onto their funds for periods of time because they SAY there have been problems with your account. Sure they can change their terms any time without notice, blah blah blah, but why is THAT right? Because it says it in the fine print? Is their fine print really always right or is it just what we believe because "...it comes from a bank?" It is that fine print we should be fighting against, not each other. I have heard more than enough horror stories from people in THIS very forum who claim that banks and gift card companies hold their funds for a month or two just because their policies allow them to do so because they figured out that person was just trying to earn miles. I know of one guy who STILL have up to $10,000 outstanding from Bank of America and all he did was run a bunch of gift card-like transactions from his own home computer and earn miles. He gave his ID and SS number, he provided all CC info and his real address, and he did not hide from them or anyone. But when he calls CS to ask why he cant have him money back, they give him the smoke screen and have found ways to hang onto his money (probably to earn interest on it) as long as they can--because their terms changed and suddenly his gift cards got locked up! just like that. I could go on and on about how I KNOW he did nothing illegal, but most people reading this will still assume it was "user error" because of the false perception that "companies and banks would never do that to someone because they are respectable businesses." Bull! I give you ENRON on a smaller scale! (The one good thing about small mom and pop stores is that the CS manager is the owner and he or she IS accessible most of the time, not usually hiding from his or her own customers--but sometimes they do too) All I can say is the money order thing should be easy to do and if it's worth it, go for it. ;)MM |
Originally Posted by ingy
Pretty amazing response to me. Let's see Value mags gives away miles worth more than the $ involved, NO BEEF, A privately owned Amerisuites gives up rooms for .01 per night NO BEEF, Tickets to Iceland for $61 and NO BEEF.
And, FWIW, my purchase of any of these three was limited, in that out of all of them, I only bought renewals for three magazines that I subscribed to anyway. That doesn't mean that I won't avail myself of a fare error when it shows up - but I think that the two are not comparable because a published fare, generally available to the public, is not the same as a scheme that forces one party to break a rule to do so. I guess we all better check with you before we decide what is inexcusable and what is ok with you. How about a 5 chain local grocery that gross over $5 mill a month is that one ok with you??? Or maybe a party store with 3 outlets thats been in business for over 75 years, is that ok with you?????? The fact of the matter is that people know that it's against the rules, yet they persist on doing it. And that's what galls me. Get off your High Horse Nako. If they want to close it down they will and can. Mike |
Originally Posted by nako
How about no and no.
Originally Posted by nako
As I've stated before, the issue is the fact that this behavior is predicated upon the notion that the transaction should not be allowed under the merchant's rules. It doesn't matter to be if the store is Meijer or a party store in East Lansing, Michigan.
2) did you know they call it LANSING because if you look of the shape of the city on the map, it actually LOOKS like the resulting splatter of what happens when you LANSE a boil?
Originally Posted by nako
The fact of the matter is that people know that it's against the rules, yet they persist on doing it. And that's what galls me.
Besides, nearly everything that's done in the world of faltering FF progams is breaking a rule somewhere. And don't go telling me you have NEVER broken ANY rules! I aint buying it, nor would I like ya very much if you were such a goodie two shoes! ;)MM |
So if I go into a store and ask to buy a money order and pay for it on my credit card, why is it my job to think about whether the store is making a good business decision? By that logic, why ever pay for something at a store with a credit card, since the owners lose up to 4% or potentially more on the transaction?
For whatever reason, some stores and merchants have decided that incurring credit card fees as part of the cost of doing business is, in fact, good for business overall. A business pays roughly the same percentage of the purchase to the CC company whether I'm buying milk, money orders, or gasoline and has decided that the cost to them for doing so is worth the profit that they are earning on the transaction overall. The profit earned on a money order sale is the fee they charge you for using that service. They may also decide that taking a loss on the money order sales is worth it to get that customer in the store to buy other stuff for all you know. It's a common enough practice. It is ultimately up to the business to determine if they can make money accepting credit cards as payment for their products or not. If you feel that your local mom-n-pop shop has overlooked this and want to help them out, then you should explain this in detail to them, by all means. I don't think that Mike's post above is wrongly 'holier-than-thou' or whatever others are insinuating, but I do not think that it is particularly informed. I think it's good to have this debate, but in the end, it is up to the merchant to seek what is best for the merchant and the customer to seek what is best for the customer. Q: Is buying a money order with a credit card an illegal transaction? If so, where? peace, ~Ben~ |
Originally Posted by seoulmanjr
I don't think that Mike's post above is wrongly 'holier-than-thou' or whatever others are insinuating, but I do not think that it is particularly informed. I think it's good to have this debate, but in the end, it is up to the merchant to seek what is best for the merchant and the customer to seek what is best for the customer.
It is, however, significantly better than the flaming I've otherwise withstood in this thread and other threads on similar subjects, so I will digress. I never have disputed the fact (nor will I dispute the fact) that credit card merchant fees are a cost of doing business. A certain percentage of any transaction is built into the cost of the good, anticipating that it will cover the credit card merchant fee. Where your analogy falls, though, is that the sale of money orders by a third-party merchant is not the same as simply buying a gallon of milk or a loaf of bread. When a person buys a money order (say, for $100), that $100 gets passed onto the issuer of the money order. The extra fee (which is often set by the issuing bank) is all the profit that the merchant will see off of the transaction. They do not get a percentage of the money order - only the 50 cents or a dollar flat fee (or whatever) that is charged for the purchase. A store selling $10,000 worth of milk makes a percentage on each gallon of milk, because they derive revenue from the entire price of the milk. A store selling $10,000 worth of money orders, however, will only make as much money as the number of money orders they sold. If the fee is $1, they'll make $1 if that came in the form of 1 money order, and they'll make $100 if they sell 100 money orders. If the store has a 20 percent margin on milk, they'll have $2,000 in profit, which is more than enough money to cover any fees. Were the store to accept credit cards for money orders, however, they'd be paying 2 or 3 percent of the $10,000 in money orders - not just the fee. In a good-case scenario, the store that made $100 off of fees will only lose, perhaps, a hundred bucks in merchant fees. Someone wanting to buy thousands worth at one time, however, will buy them at $1000 intervals, not $100 intervals. Therefore, the loss that is incurred is much greater - 10 $1000 money orders will only net $10 in fees, at a loss of $200 or $300 in merchant fees. I am also fully aware of the concept of the loss leader - bringing in people and selling them a low-cost item with the hopes that they'll buy more and more merchandise. However, this is not a loss leader that they can avail themselves of, contrary to this statement you made: It is ultimately up to the business to determine if they can make money accepting credit cards as payment for their products or not. Q: Is buying a money order with a credit card an illegal transaction? If so, where? 1) It's an easy target for fraud. A stolen credit card (which is fairly traceable) can be easily converted to a more untraceable form, with no real means for recovery of the goods. 2) It easily allows for the circumvention of cash advance policies set forth by credit cards. I tend to believe (especially given the BidPay example) that the disincentive of credit card fees is part of the reason as well. Money order companies want their merchants to make money off of the transaction - if the merchant doesn't make money, there is no real incentive for them to sell them, and they'll move on to something else. And the fewer merchants that are selling the money orders, the less that the money order company makes. (That is purely speculative on my part - but I do believe it may play some part in the decision.) For the final time in this thread (because I'm sick and tired of being attacked for having a contrary opinion), my issue with any scheme that comes up on FT has to do with whether any rules were broken to get to that point. I don't have a problem with loopholes or deals that work within the rules and the framework of a program or a business. For that matter, I don't have issue with the fare errors that come up here. Mistakes happen, and people need to be responsible for them. If I screw up the pricing on one of my items, I'll honor the price. This is not only the right thing to do from a legal standpoint, but I think it's the right thing to do from an ethical standpoint. In other words, I screwed up, and I'll make it right. This one, however, is predicated on the fact that the consumer must violate a policy - to go outside of the rules - in order to gain benefit. As a small business owner, I have no sympathy for schemes - deliberately designed to flaunt the rules or policies - that ultimately cause businesses to lose. And, to that end, the consumer will lose as well, since businesses will generally raise their prices on all goods to correct the inefficiency elsewhere. Mike |
Can we just close this thread and you people can open another one on the ethics of FT in general. Then people will have a chance to not read it. :_)
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Nako,
I think you are way off here. If the merchant allows it, then its fair game. Thats what happens in a capitalistic envinro. As for the people who claim its OK to go after WalMart or some other big company because it is faceless but not OK for a smaller store? I dont understand your logic. Wrong would be wrong no matter how large the company. So it would be wrong to do it to everyone or OK to do it to everyone. Size of Corp should have no bearing on your standards. I happen to feel, if they allow it, then its OK. As for earning miles. Its not illegal to buy a MO or cash instrument with your CC. However, they dont want to allow you to earn miles or points with those purchases. And they would like to collect a cash advance fee. Same with their cash advance checks ( most dont allow for mile earning, unless you pay that 3% fee). Ken in Phx |
Some very good points overall. I disagree with a few and stand by my earlier reasoning. I never 'flamed' or personally attacked you in what I thought was a thoughtful and reasonable response that I wrote. I hope you don't take my continued disagreement as a personal offense.
Look - I agree that if I were running a business I wouldn't do it either. My point was that if the business is offering a product/service and I offer credit card as a form of payment and they accept it, then why am I the bad guy that is doing something inexcusable? It'd be one thing if I did something nefarious like deceived a clerk into doing it, but if the money order place says they accept credit cards and I decide to pay with one, how is that unethical on my part? Businesses make offers on their products and services all the time that are undervalued, but have myriad reasons for doing so such as attracting new customers, maintaining current ones, generating more sales, good publicity, etc. Your post goes on at length and lays out good reasons why a merchant shouldn't sell money orders for CC payment, but it seems to me that in your scenarios, it would be the merchant selling the money order that is the one going outside the rules you noted -- not me, the consumer who is offering in good faith a form of payment that is accepted. So yeah - a horrible decision on the part of the merchant (and maybe unethical of them), but unethical and inexcusable on the part of the consumer? No way. Then again, the OP never wrote exactly what their modus operandi is for this, so we can't really debate the ethics of what is actually going on in detail. peace, ~Ben~ For the final time in this thread (because I'm sick and tired of being attacked for having a contrary opinion), my issue with any scheme that comes up on FT has to do with whether any rules were broken to get to that point. I don't have a problem with loopholes or deals that work within the rules and the framework of a program or a business. For that matter, I don't have issue with the fare errors that come up here. Mistakes happen, and people need to be responsible for them. If I screw up the pricing on one of my items, I'll honor the price. This is not only the right thing to do from a legal standpoint, but I think it's the right thing to do from an ethical standpoint. In other words, I screwed up, and I'll make it right. This one, however, is predicated on the fact that the consumer must violate a policy - to go outside of the rules - in order to gain benefit. As a small business owner, I have no sympathy for schemes - deliberately designed to flaunt the rules or policies - that ultimately cause businesses to lose. And, to that end, the consumer will lose as well, since businesses will generally raise their prices on all goods to correct the inefficiency elsewhere. Mike |
Originally Posted by ja_user
Can we just close this thread and you people can open another one on the ethics of FT in general. Then people will have a chance to not read it. :_)
peace, ~Ben~ |
Its Time to Close the Thread
It's turned into an ethical debate and no longer has anything to do with FF Miles. We are serving no further purpose by continuing.
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the money order thread would have been better suited for the credit card forum where a certain visabuxx thread in that forum has similar debates woven throughout.
Anyway, Nako, I have to say I do agree with much of what you say and the way you put it. BUT I think you need to know that many of us are not trying to trash you just because you have a different opinion. You just need to understand that, like email, a forum text is often not fully communicating the writer's full intent (icones or symbols or emphasis on words or phrases we speak in here are not always communicated or known how best to communicate in text format by all persons writing them) SO some of what you said is agreeable to me, but I do have to say that in the world of miles, I have to cheat to win. And I admit this openly! Is it wrong? maybe. But look at the one-sided obtuse ways of the airlines who market their false, and value-less product that hardly works for all people who get suckered into getting the mile product! So yeah, I find tricky ways but it aint fraud. I cheat but I do not steal. Many of us do. I dont want to put someone out of business (except a scammer, or maybe points.com because they are one) but I also do not want to lose and I, as a consumer, have increasingly found it harder to NOT lose unless I amso tenacious that one would perceive me as someone who would want to put the other side out of business even when I don't! Does that make sense? We have to fight for ways to live! And it is no more so true than in miles land! We have to fight--to keep up with changing rules, upping of award level requirements, and everything involving redemption. We have to fight to get half of what we want, and we fight a lot harder than some lazy store clerk who doesnt even know why he still sells money orders anyway! So, by gosh I will be seeking out and exploiting ANY WAY I CAN to get those darn miles and if money orders is one way, then I will use it til it dies! At work, you show up and get paid and do your job and hopefully it puts money on the table. There are advocacies and resources to help maintain that theory of life's necessity. But with miles, we really only have each other to rely on for ways to get what we need to live. That being said, this thread's debate of what is right or wrong IS about miles, and the whole money order issue is one way to get them, so I WILL get them and this forum will hear about it!! I will scratch and claw at every way I can to get them, in fact, and so will all of the people reading this, Nako included. You (Nako) said two things that can be disputed that relate to this: The transaction is not illegal. It is, however, a violation of the merchant agreement of nearly every single money order issuer in the United States. This is for a couple of reasons: 1) It's an easy target for fraud. A stolen credit card (which is fairly traceable) can be easily converted to a more untraceable form, with no real means for recovery of the goods. 2) It easily allows for the circumvention of cash advance policies set forth by credit cards. my reponse to #1 is this: We are NOT trying to do fraud and we can prove it to CC companies that say we fall into that same category just because we churn gift cards and money orders. All we have to do is continue to tell them that we are more than willing to disclose our entire lives and that all we want is miles (not that I will, of course). For example, a CC company has alllll my info. When you sign up for a money order or gift card, you have to show ID or give alllll your info. Why then, does anyone think I am frauding? Why, because it LOOKS that way to some unknowing person who sees all my money order transactions? What if they just DID THEIR JOB MORE THOROUGLY and separted us and our transactions from the REAL fraudsters. We have to pay for what we do and we are more than willing to do so, and we tenaciously find ways to get deals, but they call it near-fraud. Why? Because we are good at it? Is that right? No. We are BUYING money orders WITH our legal tender--be it cash or gift cards or debit cards or credit cards! How is that fraud? If they think it looks like fraud, that is wrong and we should be mad at them for accusing or assuming that is what we are. banks love to use this excuse--and they are duping all of us by doing so--because that's their easy way out of a deal they know the F**K'd up on! they should instead FIRE their marketer and serve the economy by giving a better person the freakin job! There are some dummies with jobs out there and as a recruiter for martketing professionals, I know of a few great candidates who SHOULD be working who are not! that's because dummies run thinsg some times. I mean, look at the US itself! (ha ha) My response to #2: Yup, that's right. But you said it: we circumvent the policies... We aint breaking them as they are written. We ciurumvent them! It IS a loophole, which you also said something about in your post. It just lasts longer than a one-off fare mistake, that's all. Still, NOT WRONG on our part to take some of this pie while it's there! Lastly, why do stores like these even offer money orders? Maybe they should not. But i am glad--as I'm sure Ingy is--that they do! (And it's not Ingy's fault this is a big debate. it IS a good thread! thanks OP! !MM:) |
Originally Posted by Marathon Man
the money order thread would have been better suited for the credit card forum where a certain visabuxx thread in that forum has similar debates woven throughout.
Anyway, Nako, I have to say I do agree with much of what you say and the way you put it. BUT I think you need to know that many of us are not trying to trash you just because you have a different opinion. You just need to understand that, like email, a forum text is often not fully communicating the writer's full intent (icones or symbols or emphasis on words or phrases we speak in here are not always communicated or known how best to communicate in text format by all persons writing them) As many other people have pointed out, this debate is reaching a point where very little new can be said. The people who think that this is fine will not agree with the people who don't. I do want to take issue with things that you posted here, though: We are BUYING money orders WITH our legal tender--be it cash or gift cards or debit cards or credit cards! How is that fraud? If they think it looks like fraud, that is wrong and we should be mad at them for accusing or assuming that is what we are. Also, note that I never said that people who were trying to earn miles were engaging in fraud. I merely mentioned fraud as a reason why money orders generally cannot be purchased with a credit card. Any person with a stolen credit card could, in one fell swoop, empty the limit of the credit card and convert it into a form that is significantly less traceable than the credit card - and much, much easier to spend without being caught. My response to #2: Yup, that's right. But you said it: we circumvent the policies... We aint breaking them as they are written. We ciurumvent them! It IS a loophole, which you also said something about in your post. It just lasts longer than a one-off fare mistake, that's all. Still, NOT WRONG on our part to take some of this pie while it's there! It doesn't circumvent a rule or take advantage of some sort of loophole. It flat-out violates the rule. And it saddens me that people have so little regard for rules that they think it's just like taking advantage of pie while it's there because someone knows they're not supposed to be doing something, but they do it anyway because they can get away with it, even though they know that someone is losing hundreds of dollars or more because of it. In my opinion, it's no different than walking into the store and stealing the pie. That said, if the moderators are going to lock this thread, they should also delete it. To merely leave it locked stifles other people from engaging in a debate that is, I believe, important regarding the legitimacy of schemes such as these. I'm now officially done with this thread. Mike |
well Mike your arguements are well put so I can at least say that.
Dont be done with the thread because it may upset you (and if it does, I am sorry it does) but rather, let's go back to the original issue at hand. the original issue was this: Poster found a place to buy MOs with a CC. We all wanted to know more. It spun into a debate as to whether that action should even be allowable and some who are new to the entire concept began a debate about it. Some who are savvy to it, responded and some just chimed in not knowing what to do about it. BUT the original issue is still there: you can do it at some places. Illegal or not, breaking policy or not, it can be done. And I guess I have to side with the camp who believes that if the store is waving its flag begging me to come in and buy milk for a $1 and then grab a Money order in the same CC purchase, I guess I'm goin in. Nuf said. Again, i have found none in my area. I live off Rte 128 in the North Shore of MA now, and I work in Charlestown, right next to the city of Boston. I have not looked everywhere but if I find it I will do it. :)MM |
IMO opinon Fraud would be if you know the worker and get them to put it thru on a CC which they arent suppose to. the fact that a place will accept it even at a loss, well if it is a small biz owner then they will be hands on and would see if they check everything that its costing them $$ instead of making $$. I had a small biz, single retail store many yrs ago and believe me I knew which vendor would cost me the least amount for each item and ordered accordingly. Sometimes if I had no choice the one who charged more got it cause I needed the item.
So even if the OP is using a Small Biz, as long as hes not doing anything other than walking in and requesting MOs and gives his CC, theres nothing wrong with it,IMO. Its not up to me to alert the store owner/s that they are charging less for an item then everyone else even if I know that they usually charge alot more per item than everyone else. Maybe they have someone who prices things but if they dont have a system of checks and balances (as I had) then they dont belong in Biz. AGAIN Im not talking about where you have a friend that although the item is marked $X rings it up for less or even worse doesnt ring it up at all and just places it into our bag. Im saying its up to the Biz owner to be on top of things and if they arent thats their problem. I dont believe its Illegal to go in and try to buy an MO with a CC, as alot of posts have stated where it was once possible most stores policy is Cash or Debit, if there are stores that will sell a MO via a CC thats not my problem. I have never done any of these Gift Card or MO runs ever. I didnt want to put the time in, sometimes having to wait at a post office can take upwards of an hour bet finding parking to waiting on line.So I felt it wasnt worth it time wise for me. BUT if the OP is doing it legit or anyone else then keep doing so till it no longer works for you. |
Originally Posted by TTT103
What on earth is the purpose of this post ?
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never mind things changed
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Originally Posted by Alcibiades
Some smaller chains or stores that havent been hammered in the past may not have created a formal policy or fully trained all employees to policy.
Originally Posted by alanh
Flipping large numbers/amounts of money orders could also get you flagged for money laundering.
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Originally Posted by Grog
Is this a real negative consequence of this? What aspect of what anyone would be doing would be illegal? I, myself, would enjoy having the blackcoats interrogating me; seriously. They'd be closing up the briefcases rather quickly, I think.
I reality, if you are simply paying for miles, there is no case. I can imagine trying to explain this to someone. Investigator: "You are paying to use your own money?" You: Thats right I buy a Money Order with my Credit Card and then dep in a bank Inv: My not just write a check into that account and save the drive and the money order fee? You: Well, I earn miles for my purchase Inv: How many miles? You: It come out to .003-.005 a miles, which is $210 for a ticket biz class to Europe. Inv: hey how do I get in on this ! :D |
Moving money around in an (apparently) pointless fashion is not illegal per se, but may indicate money laundering so the Feds may check up on you. The result can be that they determine no laundering is going on, as suggested above.
It's like the deal with cash transactions over $10k. They aren't illegal, but will generate some scrutiny. |
Originally Posted by alanh
Moving money around in an (apparently) pointless fashion is not illegal per se, but may indicate money laundering so the Feds may check up on you. The result can be that they determine no laundering is going on, as suggested above.
It's like the deal with cash transactions over $10k. They aren't illegal, but will generate some scrutiny. I said yes and with that, they never really counted my "debt" at all. I have also not had a balance or any finance or service charges as a result of doing this, but Visa and MC sure do like me because I charge everything to them. in keeping with the suggestions of those helping you build credit I did let a balance go once and a while when I owed only a few hundred a couple years ago, and this action actually HELPS you make your credit work for you! But with the churning of MO and GC funds, you actually are always able to avoid all of those charges all the time! So it is not illegal but those who wanna make money off of fees sure would hate you for it! ;)MM |
Originally Posted by Marathon Man
could be for some, but with a lower income than normal, commissions at an all time low, and a foreign wife with only 2 years as a resident and 2 years US credit history, we were able to buy a new primary residence and we already have a vacation home. All the while, during the entire mortgage process, I was still churning upwards of $15-20+k/month of gift cards
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Originally Posted by Ken in Phx
Thats because "you da man!!!"
;):):)MM |
old thread did not notice date.
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old thread did not notice date.
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So what about using mileage earning debit cards to buy money orders at big chain stores e.g. walmart. WOuld like be legal? would it work?
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Originally Posted by martian
So what about using mileage earning debit cards to buy money orders at big chain stores e.g. walmart. WOuld like be legal? would it work?
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