Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

The UK (again) has significant legal protections for credit that mean the credit card company is jointly liable for the debt in some circumstances

And the advice for customers is often to buy mid-to-high value items using a credit card for this reason. If you order £10k of furniture for your new home from an online retailer that goes bust before delivery and you paid by credit card then you might well have a claim against your card provider instead for example.

Of course the direct connection between whether you have certain consumer protections by law and whether you technically paid on credit doesn't actually make much sense today and mostly exists for historical reasons. The corresponding risk created for card companies also contributes to the raw deal that merchants get in the terms for accepting card payments, which is a drag on the whole economy.



I'm not sure they do get such a raw deal for accepting card payments do they?

Lots of (for example) food stalls in London were popping up as card-only businesses over the last few years, because it was easier than dealing with cash. The EU rules (which presumably still apply until actually repealed) capped the fees pretty effectively.


I'm not sure they do get such a raw deal for accepting card payments do they?

Typical terms for merchants accepting credit card payments are probably the most one-sided legal agreements I've ever seen.


Oh sure, yeah no contest there. You want to accept cards here's your list of arcane rules and if you step over the line no money for you. I guess I was thinking in terms of fees etc.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: