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- Path: inforamp.net!usenet
- From: wjustice@inforamp.net (wjustice)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc
- Subject: Re: "safe" registering (Was: Announce: AWeb 1.0 released!)
- Date: 3 Apr 1996 01:43:42 GMT
- Organization: InfoRamp Inc., Toronto, Ontario (416) 363-9100
- Message-ID: <2944.6666T1141T1614@inforamp.net>
- References: <4jpi13$bqk@hubcap.clemson.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ts21-05.tor.istar.ca
- X-Newsreader: THOR 2.22 (Amiga;TCP/IP) *UNREGISTERED*
-
- Charles Taylor has added his final words to this ongoing thread about the
- safety of sending cash through the mail when registering shareware:
-
- >: Yes .. the way I understand it, halfway across the Atlantic ocean, all
- >: mail planes land on a secret island base, where every piece of mail is
- >: opened, and read ... then they take out all the cash, re-seal the envelopes
- >: and load the plane back up.
-
- >Mail gets stolen - face it. I've been dealing over the internet for a few
- >years and have had cash stolen out of several letters. Hell, one of them
- >wasn't an internet deal - it was from my grandmother! (And I have a
- >"locked" mailbox, even!)
-
- >Make fun if you will, but sending cash through the mail isn't wise.
-
- And in my case I've been sending cash through the mail for years, with never
- a problem. Luck and chance plays a part, but how you "package" your mail
- has a lot to do with it. No 'giveaway' coinage (ie. paper money only -
- placed inside a reasonable weight paer or light cardboard folder within
- your envelope), a heavyweight, non-transparent envelope (if you're really
- paranoid...write "Please Don't Bend - Photos Inside" on the outside of the
- envelope (helps account for the extra weight of the envelope))...etc.
-
- I would be reluctant to take my own advice were a very large sum of money
- involved, but most shareware fees are quite reasonable. In my case, I've
- had more trouble with Visa/Mastercard, etc than cash through the mail.
- You lose some cash, that's the end of it. Your Visa number gets into
- circulation, or is left "on account" and you could be at the mercy of
- anything(one) from a buggy software accounting program to an unscrupulous
- individual.
-
- BBy way of example, about a year and a half ago I 'upgraded' my Compuserve
- account from 2400 baud access to 9600 baud access, leaving my Visa number
- "on account". I then took advantage of on-line registration for their
- Amiga front-end, called Autopilot", which was supposed to be activated for me
- within a few days of "registering" , my Visa to be billed for $69.00 (US)
- which is approx. $100.00 (Cdn).
-
- When I had not received my "keyfile" within the week, I posted a reminder
- on-line and, Presto, the next day, there it was. Pretty good program too;
- at $100.00 Cdn. I would have hoped so. The catch? Looking at my Visa
- invoices at the end of the year (tax time), I found that I had been charged
- twice for the program.
-
- Yes, I should have checked my Visa invoices as soon as I received them, years
- of no problems had caused me to slack off); yes, I may have filled out the
- 'Autopilot' on-line registration script incorrectly, but far as I'm concerned,
- "cash in the mail", done with a little bit of camoflauge, is worth the risk;
- particularly when compared to the alternative.
-
- This is my experience; I'd be very interested in hearing what others have to
- say on the subject.
-
-
- Thanks for listening (reading) :)
-
- ---Willy Tamm............wjustice@inforamp.net
-
-