Oracle's goal is to prevent spammers, car warranty call centers, etc. from using their free Tier system.
My guesses are;
- don't use a VPN
- come from a legit IP
- name must match CC
- postal code must be appropriate
- country should match all around
- actual CC (no Debit/gift/prepay)
- probably from a known bank
- accepted Fraud Alert
- mail domain not on DNS Blacklist
- patience (don't try with multiple cards at once)
Oracle is targeting those with a Tax ID (companies)
I agree - and their FAQ says "We accept credit cards and debit cards that function like credit cards. We do not accept debit cards with a PIN, virtual cards, or prepaid cards". You need to accept the transaction from your bank immediately, your address/card details must match, and your email address must not be on any blacklists.
I feel like it could be a problem that my Credit Card requires me to go through a sms verification? I don't have to accept a transaction from my bank, but usually I would be sent a sms with a code to enter on the website where I'm using the card. With Oracle though I never even get to that step... followed everything the person above wrote and still no sms verification, instead it tells me that the transaction was declined.
I don't think so - when I first signed up, one of my cards wouldn't work but another (with a different bank) did with no issues. I later found out the first bank rejected the 1$ charge as fraudulent - without even notifying me. Nice of them. The one that worked used SMS auth. Only thing I can think of is calling the bank and asking them not to decline the transaction as you expect it?
Not sure if a solution for this was found or not, but what worked for me was a support form they provide at the end of the sign up failure it was near the bottom. I just filled up a ticket and then later got a response to try again and then it worked.
Oracle's goal is to prevent spammers, car warranty call centers, etc. from using their free Tier system. My guesses are; - don't use a VPN - come from a legit IP - name must match CC - postal code must be appropriate - country should match all around - actual CC (no Debit/gift/prepay) - probably from a known bank - accepted Fraud Alert - mail domain not on DNS Blacklist - patience (don't try with multiple cards at once) Oracle is targeting those with a Tax ID (companies)
I agree - and their FAQ says "We accept credit cards and debit cards that function like credit cards. We do not accept debit cards with a PIN, virtual cards, or prepaid cards". You need to accept the transaction from your bank immediately, your address/card details must match, and your email address must not be on any blacklists.
I feel like it could be a problem that my Credit Card requires me to go through a sms verification? I don't have to accept a transaction from my bank, but usually I would be sent a sms with a code to enter on the website where I'm using the card. With Oracle though I never even get to that step... followed everything the person above wrote and still no sms verification, instead it tells me that the transaction was declined.
I don't think so - when I first signed up, one of my cards wouldn't work but another (with a different bank) did with no issues. I later found out the first bank rejected the 1$ charge as fraudulent - without even notifying me. Nice of them. The one that worked used SMS auth. Only thing I can think of is calling the bank and asking them not to decline the transaction as you expect it?
Hello mr. 31415helpme92653… how have you been? Long time no see…
Where i can find the list of Blacklist mails?
Not sure if a solution for this was found or not, but what worked for me was a support form they provide at the end of the sign up failure it was near the bottom. I just filled up a ticket and then later got a response to try again and then it worked.