> From: Tom Limoncelli [mailto:t...@whatexit.org]
> 
> On Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 12:36 AM, lopser <lop...@nedharvey.com> wrote:
> > Do what every other credit card point of sale vendor does.  Take the credit
> card number, expiration date, name on card, and CVV code.  Then pass it
> along to Visa or Mastercard or whoever for processing.  If possible, use
> Verified By Visa, or Mastercard Securecode, or whatever the equivalent
> alternative is offered by that particular credit card company.
> 
> I'm not sure I understand the situation so please help me understand
> if I'm not.  It seems like Google did contact one of those companies
> and the card was rejected.  It sounds like you feel Google should have
> given up at that point.  If I'm understanding you correctly I'll
> forward that along as I promised.  Am I understanding you correctly?

I have no reason to believe google is attempting to process my request when I 
try to buy something.  Google won't even let me add another card.  I have no 
reason to believe google is trying to process the order and getting rejected 
upstream.  Google is doing the rejecting, not the bank.

If the credit card gets declined, then it is my opinion the vendor should give 
up and simply tell the consumer, "declined."  But that is not happening here.  
I have no reason to believe google is even attempting to process the 
transaction.

If the credit card were getting declined, then google asking for my passport 
wouldn't change anything.  So this furthers the belief...  Google is not 
attempting to process the transaction.  It's not being declined by the credit 
card company.  It's google policy.

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