OP 31 August, 2020 - 09:05 PM
Their AVS system is complex system but easy to understand. I've processed orders in virtual machine no problem. The only issue people will have is vcc. Most vcc are AVS which means if you use a billing address that is different to the one registered to your vcc service account, your order will get avs'd. There is one way to bypass this which i have personally tried and that is by sending photoshopped bank statement through their official website which they will ask for in an email. Secondly, there are a few vcc/bank services that are non-avs which means you can use any billing address but these are not so common these days and they won't trigger AVS. There are some things you can do to lessen the chances of being avs'd, first is buying a cheap item like 5 euro and then 2nd order making it bigger.
Some vcc services allow you to change the billing address in the account settings so for each order you can change the address to the customers address so the card goes through, some vccs work this way but others still won't work due to the name being different or something else. There is no "algorithm", just ways to get your order processed. The most important thing beside VCC is definitely your IP that is being used. To maximize your chances of avoiding AVS, i would recommend the IP being not only from the same country but also the same state as the address that you want to deliver to and don't use low quality cheap proxies, you need residential IP or mobile data works aswell. Another thing is that if the address is already used or belongs to an account that already exists, you can still get AVS. However, there are multiple ways to get past this. One is to alter the address - for example - donkey kong street 123 - change it to donkey konng street 123 or something like this, it will still get delivered. That's the bulk of it really. This is just my experience with amazon over the last few years.
Any questions? pm me and i will help you for free!
Some vcc services allow you to change the billing address in the account settings so for each order you can change the address to the customers address so the card goes through, some vccs work this way but others still won't work due to the name being different or something else. There is no "algorithm", just ways to get your order processed. The most important thing beside VCC is definitely your IP that is being used. To maximize your chances of avoiding AVS, i would recommend the IP being not only from the same country but also the same state as the address that you want to deliver to and don't use low quality cheap proxies, you need residential IP or mobile data works aswell. Another thing is that if the address is already used or belongs to an account that already exists, you can still get AVS. However, there are multiple ways to get past this. One is to alter the address - for example - donkey kong street 123 - change it to donkey konng street 123 or something like this, it will still get delivered. That's the bulk of it really. This is just my experience with amazon over the last few years.
Any questions? pm me and i will help you for free!