Bramblethorn
Sleep-deprived
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2012
- Posts
- 18,417
This seems relevant to those of us who earn income selling erotica:
https://tacit.livejournal.com/609357.html
Short version: Franklin Veaux is a game designer who sells a sex game on his website. For 13 years he took credit card payments through BPS, a merchant account provider, until BPS told him they were terminating his account for unspecified "risk reasons". When he tried to find a replacement provider he was knocked back again for the same nebulous "risk reasons":
https://tacit.livejournal.com/609357.html
Short version: Franklin Veaux is a game designer who sells a sex game on his website. For 13 years he took credit card payments through BPS, a merchant account provider, until BPS told him they were terminating his account for unspecified "risk reasons". When he tried to find a replacement provider he was knocked back again for the same nebulous "risk reasons":
I'm not the only one this has happened to. Indeed, it's happened to lots and lots of people. The same pattern, across different businesses and different merchant account providers: A business receives a sudden notification that their merchant account (or in some cases, their business checking account) is being terminated. When they ask why, no answer beyond "risk reasons" is forthcoming. Porn performers, payday loan services, dating sites, fireworks sellers, porn producers, travel clubs...it's a very specific list of folks who are having this problem. And, not surprisingly, there's a reason for it.
The reason is the Department of Justice, which for the past couple of years has undertaken a project they call Operation Choke Point.
The goal of Operation Choke Point is to pressure businesses in morally objectionable fields out of business, by leaning on the banks that provide services to those businesses. If you can't get banking or credit card services, the reasoning goes, you can't stay in business. So the DoJ is approaching commercial banks, telling them to close accounts for individuals and businesses in "objectionable" industries.
It should be noted that the businesses being targeted are not breaking the law. Lawful businesses and individuals are losing access to lawful services because the government objects to them on moral grounds.
The banks being pressured to close accounts are reticent about talking about it; however, one business owner, whose instincts were in the right place, apparently managed to get a recording of a phone call in which his merchant account processor (EFT) told him they were pressured by the government to close the account. His recording has made it to a Congressional hearing looking into the program. (Some banks have reported being told that they would be investigated for racketeering if they failed to close accounts belonging to targeted businesses, despite the fact that the targeted businesses are acting lawfully.)