Quote:
Originally Posted by BlueDude
If you have issues with a particular website, you should deal with that website's owner directly instead of relying on CCBill to solve your problem. Even if CCBill did yank the credit card processor from that site, the website owner just jump to another cc biller.
It isn't CCBill job to "police" every websites they work with and there are no benefits even if they did as I said it is really easy to just sign up with another biller.
If you have issue with a particular website, get a lawyer and sue them. If it an underage questions, contact the DOJ/FBI or some federal authroities. Obviously a lot of people don't want to deal with the website's owner directly because they don't want to pay for the legal fees so they are taking a shortcut and hope CCBill will do it for them.
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A lot of times a website owner cannot be determined due to privacy or obfuscation. Or they may be located overseas in some backwards ass country that hardly cares about the rule of law. There are only a handful of processors for adult material, so I see nothing wrong with an industry leader like CCBill yanking a copyright infringer's billing if someone sends a DMCA notice. They don't have to be the internet police, but they are a huge company and they can easily afford to be part of the solution rather than part of the problem.