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by singular 5532 days ago
This is vastly disturbing. Surely there is a gap in the market here for a payment processor that doesn't do shit like this? Are there any startups in this area?

Or is this just an inevitable result of working with money (having to be very careful to avoid scammers/criminals)? I really can't believe that's the case though.

As @dexen said, perhaps there should be some provisions put in place to disincentivise current processors at least.

Perhaps bitcoin has a role to play to avoid such situations, Or would we just have the same problems over again? Perhaps somebody more knowledgeable than I could comment.

4 comments

> This is vastly disturbing. Surely there is a gap in the market here for a payment processor that doesn't do shit like this?

While I agree that there is probably a market for a payment processor that doesn't punish TOS violations, I really doubt that's a market anybody would want to play in.

Google's TOS disallow the use of the word "donation" unless you are a non-profit organization. And "donation" is precisely the term used.

For every "benign" TOS violation, I'm sure there must be hundreds of malicious ones trying to scam google or consumers out of their money. Not making exceptions at least is fair and users know exactly where they stand.

Still. I think Google should maybe

a) warn users before just banning them (though even this might lead to people trying to game the system)

b) hand out the money either back to the buyers or to the just banned seller (after manual investigation which might be what Google doesn't want to do)

c) maybe provide an appeal process, though, again, this might lead to people gaming that.

It's the 'frozen without explanation' aspect I don't like. I didn't realise that this was a legitimate ToS violation, but agreed, they should have at least warned them first.

I suspect that evil people ruin it for everyone, money is just too tempting for people with 'flexible morality'.

EDIT: But still, these providers should do better, regardless.

When google puts robots in charge of enforcing policy without a mechansims for the affected humans to request human oversight, that is the very definition of dehumanizing.

I wonder if you could sell hand crafted, polished oak, donation boxes with google checkout and not be attacked by their robots.

d) Make the restriction on the word 'donation' more explicit and obvious.
Bitcoin _can_ solve this problem because it is totally distributed and doesn't depend on traditional banks which means transferring value directly between individuals and organization becomes much simpler.
Currency (at least metal coins) was, at first, distributed and did not depend on banks for transfer. Banks came about later on, as an additional help in some business and private money handling. Currently banks are pretty much necessary for two reasons: network effect -- everybody has bank account and expects you to interface with it, and better loan rates -- banks can give loans at lower percent than small time lenders, thanks to pooling of risk and economies of scale of processing.

It is expected some Bitcoin users (be it private or institutional) will become quite bank-alike in some future (as per various posts on blogs and HN in discussions of Bitcoin).

In short, Bitcoin doesn't remove banks -- neither need for them, nor ability to operate them. They just haven't moved into this space yet.

EDIT:

first episode of ``The Ascent of Money'' [1], `Dreams of avarice', explains how banking, as we know it, came to be.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_ascent_of_money

>> Bitcoin doesn't remove banks

Yes, it does in this case. One can receive money electronically through Bitcoin, without account with a bank, PayPal or Google.

Which is the same as mailing cash. It's possible to do that without a bank as well.

Since the Bitcoin protocol allows third-parties to hold user's wallets, it's entirely possible to create a bank. In fact, the protocol seems to encourage the aggregation of wallets.

Mailing cash is obviously very different from a Bitcoin transfer (speed, security, legal issues).
A better example would be paying for something with cash. You're taking money, and giving it to someone else(presumably in exchange for a good or service).

The point is that you're moving your currency(BTC, USD) from you to another party without any intermediary interfering with the transaction. If you mail $1 to someone, that's effectively the same thing as paying them with 1 BTC.

EDIT: I think the people who are saying that Bitcoin cannot have banks are conflating payment processors with banks. A bank is a place where you go to put your money, and they use that money to make loans, which gets them more money through payments on loan interest. They incentivize this behavior(giving them money) by giving out interest on the amount in the accounts.

Payment processors are companies(i.e. Visa, MasterCard, etc.) that let you take your money from an account, and give it to someone else. Banks may offer these in the form of checking accounts, but that is not their intended purpose. These, I agree, are definitely not needed with the Bitcoin system, because that's what the entire protocol handles.

I wonder what would have happened if Indie Stone was using Amazon Payments here? They seem to have better customer service and it seems more clear to me how to differentiate commercial from non-profit transactions https://payments.amazon.com/sdui/sdui/helpTab/Amazon-Simple-...
the reason it hasn't happened is because money is hard to deal with.
Yup, Econtalk did a recent podcast on bitcoin which is a great intro for anyone interested. The discussion on HN:

http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2011/04/andresen_on_bit.htm...