Based on our record, Copy and Paste Emoji should be more popular than Stripe Chargeback Protection. It has been mentiond 33 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Using Stripes Advanced Fraud protection to keep you and your money safe,. Source: over 1 year ago
They should use their credit card processor's fraud detection. For example, Stripe has Stripe Radar: https://stripe.com/radar. Source: almost 2 years ago
Yea, unfortunately Stripe doesnβt make these decisions. Couple things you could consider: * Adding additional verification steps like Stripe Identity * Requiring 3DS, which shifts loss liability in some cases to the card issuer * Using Stripe Checkout with Chargeback Protection: https://stripe.com/radar/chargeback-protection. It costs 0.4%, but you wouldnβt need to worry about losses at all (up to a certain volume... Source: about 2 years ago
You could consider looking into using Chargeback Protection, which will add to your processing fee, but will protect you from loss from chargebacks on eligible transactions (i.e., purchase made via the Checkout). You won't have to provide evidence, you won't lose the money (up to a certain amount per year); it's essentially an insurance system. And from my reading of their docs, I don't think you'd have to deal... Source: about 2 years ago
I have seen companies out there that specialize in combatting chagebacks for businesses. Basically any chargeback that happens, the company takes care of disputing it. For a company like yourself that processes high dollar transactions/products/services, you may do well to seek such a company and use their service, get your own merchant account and stop using 3rd party processors. Stripe has a chargeback... Source: about 2 years ago
I use this website which I keep pinned to my taskbar so I can have easy access to emjois. I probably use the traditional π most often. I like this π one though. And one I've assigned context to is π because it looks how I feel when I'm unsure about something because to me it looks like the thought process of "Hm, I don't know. Maybe? Yeah okay!". Source: 12 months ago
Emojis in Chrome (and other browsers too actually) used to display the true classic Segoe UI Emoji font (ex: if I go to getemoji.com, these used to display the same emojis as Word; copy paste from that site to Word looked the same), but just a couple months ago something changed. Now it's rendering different versions of these emojis. I've ruled out an extension. Chrome is up to date. Windows 10. Whats interesting... Source: 12 months ago
I used this: https://getemoji.com You can search for the type you want and just copy. Source: about 1 year ago
Here are a few websites to help: (may be updated since 2018) β’ Get emoji -https://getemoji.com/ Add emojis to the subject lines for better open rates. β’ SPAM Trigger Words - https://blog.prospect.io/455-email-spam-trigger-words-avoid-2018/455 words to avoid. β’ Subject Line words to use and not to use - https://content.coschedule.com/EmailSubjectLine-Words-Download.pdf β’ Write better subject lines -... Source: about 1 year ago
For those bouncy moments - have been told about a website for importing free emojis! β€οΈ https://getemoji.com/. Source: about 1 year ago
Kount - eCommerce fraud detection & prevention
EmojiTerra - EmojiTerra is one of the interesting websites that provides you a chance to download emojis of every type in the form of files and allows you to share them with your friends or family members.
Signifyd - Signifyd is a SaaS-based, enterprise-grade fraud technology solution for e-commerce stores.
Imoji - Turn selfies or any photo into stickers you can text
Unstack Payments - eCommerce landing pages and membership sites
Emojipedia - The online encyclopedia of emoji.