I have about 15 cards that can't be registered as they don't work anymore. They are now invalid or have a $0.00 balance and were cleaned out.
Yes I sold them but I monitor who uses what. The buy who bought from me used 1 $50 card before they all stopped working. Now I'm in a huge negative as I had to pay him and all the other customers back!!!
Do not deal with this member. If you choose to deal with him, you're letting yourself get scammed.
Good luck to you guys who are going to deal with this sofia idiot.
Heres a reality check: Anyone selling these at these steep discounts get the codes by using stolen credit card info. Thats why they don't sell them on eBay for 2-3x more[/color][/size][/b] There is a very high chance they will go bad, and a slim chance you could get in trouble for having stolen property/participating in credit card fraud. you've been warned! I posted multiple warnings earlier in the thread too if you missed them.
Ummmm, they have been sold on eBay, and RAISE and many other sites for ages but the sellers sell them for more simply because they can (and they pay high fees). I can assure you 110% of that as I had 2 shut down from RAISE.COM that I paid $92 for. I figure if I am gonna get screwed I may as well get screwed and save $60. Just because the seller sells it for $90 or $95 on eBay or Raise doesn't mean it didn't come from the same place or be obtained through the same means. If you believe that you are quite naive. You think if someone came on here and asked $99.99 that would make them legit? Wanna buy a bridge in Brooklyn?
Your an idiot dude, I never said just cause you buy something on eBay means it will be legit.
If you actually read through my post, you'd see that my point is that they could be selling these for 3x more on eBay IF THEY WERE LEGIT, but they obviously aren't. Most that you see on eBay probably are legit though, becasue you have to give name/address/I think even ss number to use paypal. Clearly this guy is not going to risk that becuase it would increase the chance that the credit card fraud gets traced back to him.
He's not doing anything different than these people:
http://koin.com/2014/01/29/credit-card-fraud-ring-busted-in-beaverton-20k-seized/
He's just doing it all through the web and taking bitcoin reduces his chance of being caught.
You can tell yourself you'd rather get "screwed" this way, but someone somewhere is dealing with fraudulent charges on their credit card as a result you buying these.
You could also take all of 3 minutes to google "starbucks credit card fraud" to see how prevalent this is with "skimmed" credit/debit card info, or info stolen in hacks like at Home Depot earlier this year. You could also take the time to read on those who have gotten caught and charged with felonies and facing serious jail time for participating in fraud.