- PayPal only - Sites that use PayPal as the only option for credit card payments sell fakes. Try it for yourself: add an item to the cart, go through the motions of checkout and get to the PayPal screen. The seller's email address (or user id) will appear on the screen. Most of the time this will be a yahoo, gmail, hotmail etc. email address, indicating a clear scam.
- Visa/Mastercard - Of the sites I investigated today they all used the same M.O. in regards to accepting credit cards. After you add an item to your cart and get to the payment screen, you're taken to a third party website to complete the transaction that appear secure since there's a clickable GeoTrust seal. The domain name in your browser will change to pay.beijing.com.cn, pay.ips.com.cn, or secure.safepaymentgate.com. The .cn domain should be a dead giveaway, as that's the international code for China. I also encountered Chinese characters on the screen several times. The third outfit, according to it's website, specializes in ' high risk merchant accounts that we will accept for credit card processing' such as 'replica merchant accounts', 'Online Pharmacy merchant accounts', 'High chargebacks/refunds merchant accounts', 'Outbound Telemarketing Merchant Accounts', etc.
- Western Union/Money Gram - While both of these are reputable companies, if you see a website selling UGGs that accept either of these as payment stay away.
- Wire Transfer - Many reputable companies will offer this for out of country clients if you ask. If it's listed as a payment option on the checkout screens, watch out.
If you find anything else, I'd love to hear it.
Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you,
ReplyDeleteYou just kept me from giving away my credit card information to one of the pay.beijin.com.cn sites.
I got alert when I saw the browser name change and googled the name.
I never been agree with the person who write about the PayPal only checkout are Fraud. If you know or see that an email address is PayPal verified believe me its the most secure transection way, because PayPal check alot of security checks before a person become verfied payPal account holder and no mater whatever email address or email domain the person have but if its related with the website its more better.
ReplyDelete2)About the pay.beijin.com.cn is not a fraud as well i am belong from UK but i am a retailer and shopping from China so i never see any problem with that "redirection" (pay.beijin.com.cn)for most its "HTTPS" also buying from a huge marketplace like eBay and if anything hannpend your bank can take care of it.
3) The other two option widly used is WU(westren Union) and TT (Tele Transfer) both are used for fruad even both are very Good services for Customers or People but the scammers use them as their Strong weapons as they have alot of security loop-wholes. I was bymyself victim of both 1 time. after that i never trust on both transections.
Why i write this because i have my life experince and saw people who were fooled by scammers as well.
Regards
SJI Shah
Yep! Me too, I got forwarded to ips.cn and it didn´t seem right so I came to this...... Thank you though you may be wrong on number one on the paypal observation, I´ve made some purchases on ecrater.com to sellers with gmail email adresses without a problem! Cheers!
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot! You've just saved me from giving away my credit card info to some chinese scammers. (pay.ips.com.cn)
ReplyDeleteSaved my life man
ReplyDeletethanks
I have tried a site for uggs and when it came to paying it sent me to a third party site Security.ssleplay.com. Is this the same as the above?
ReplyDeleteI've not seen that one, but I can't recall an authorized dealer that redirects from their URL to another to process credit cards (exceptions are to Paypal or Google Checkout)
ReplyDeleteAnyone know anything about this? I've ordered from the uggaustralia.com website and received an email today asking me to fax my id over to a US number (I'm in the UK).
ReplyDeleteI am at a site http://www.uggkickse.com it keeps redirecting me to pay.beijing.com website, however my friend's mom reccomened the site to me. I have seen the boot's she ordered off the site and the are fabulous. So, i'm stuck on what i should do?!
ReplyDeleteThat is normal. I am American living in Europe. US companies need this fax for processing the order. (Probably their banks won't cover them if a stolen credit card is used to buy their products.)
ReplyDeletei almost paid to a site using the ips.com.cn as merchant.. i even tried looking up the website then i found your blog and alot of other scammes done byt them.. thanks bro
ReplyDeleteOk....Thank you for your help.
ReplyDeleteso, do you think also this site is fake???? http://www.ralphlaurenpolousa.com/mens-polos-shortsleeved-c-1_2.html
If someone know somethink about it, please let me know!!
Thank you very much
bye bye
And yet another Thank You!
ReplyDeleteYou prevented me from ordering a product from:
www.dvdhotdeal.com
(I was already a bit suspicious, as their "Helpcenter" does not look very confidential)
after it redirected me for payment to:
pay.ips.com.cn/icpay/customization/foreigntrade/payment.aspx
http://www.uggsirelandsale.com/ is it fake or real
ReplyDeletethanks so much... I nearly got done - saw the name change to pay.ips.com. and googled. Have to continue my ugg search now!!
ReplyDeleteJust done the same thing went to order boots from bootbarn.com and I got transferred to bootbarn.me thank god their was a problem when I got put through to the 3rd screen and I couldn't enter my card details, then they emailed me bootbarn8@gmail.com and said their was a problem with my payment and to try again and get free gifts also, guess the gifts were my card being cleared!!!
ReplyDeleteSame thing happened to me thank god payment didn't go through as transferred to pay.beijing and they had to cheek to email me and ask me to try again and I would get a free gift haha
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, I thankfully had the presence of mind to double check before I submitted my card details as I had a gut feeling about this.
ReplyDeletetx tx tx tx tx tx
ReplyDeletethis website http://www.abercrombieuksale.co.uk/checkout/cart/ redirect to one below for payment
ReplyDeletehttps://pay.ips.com.cn/icpay/customization/foreigntrade/payment.aspx
Thanks
https://www.fashionpay.com/fashionpayRequestAction.action
ReplyDeleteKids and I went to blackfriday-uggs.com and were redirected to site above for payment. Looked so authentic, and then we were redirected as you said...but didn't check url until now.
Payment wasn't accepted and they wanted it again so I canceled my credit card, luckily bank did not pay it.
http://www.uggespanaprecios.com are fake as well. Falsos, estafa, no trust, crap, scammer, no comprar
ReplyDeleteSame here... just before i hit enter, i saw name change to pay.ips.com.cn.
ReplyDeleteGoogle and this site, is your friend. thx
thanks!!! i suspected something just when i was going to pay, and your info confirmed the scam. Thanks for helping stoping this f*ckers!
ReplyDeleteI'm just curious as to whether these fake sites take and abuse individual's credit card detils or whether they are simply selling un-authentic goods?
ReplyDeleteCould be either or both!
Deletehttps://pay.ips.com.cn/icpay/customization/foreigntrade/payment.aspx
ReplyDeleteTried to buy Juicy Couture under the website name www.juicycoutures.co.uk seemed amazing value and free shipping, too good to be true. I typed this link in google and a few scammers use the same form of payment.
However Paypal as mentioned on other comments is one of the most secure forms of payment as if any thing happens it covers you and if they don't give you a refund then pay pal will. If this site would have used paypal i would have bought it knowing I'm covered. Also you're not having to give personal account info as it goes from pay pal to pay pal account.
Thanks for this post!
Remember: if it seems too good to be true, then it is!
DeleteI've heard of people having a hard time getting a refund from Paypal when they unknowingly purchase counterfeit items. Be sure to read through all the fine print before you finally pull the trigger.