Credit Card / Payment Vendors / Corridor 08

Credit Card and Merchant Settlement Attestation

The chargeback mechanism exists because no cryptographically attested settlement record exists at the time of payment. Friendly fraud, card-not-present abuse, and organized dispute rings exploit this gap at a scale Mastercard estimates at $117.5 billion annually. JIL's pre-settlement attestation creates a proof-backed payment record that resolves legitimate disputes on evidence and eliminates the structural basis for fraudulent chargeback claims.

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$117.5B
Annual chargeback and friendly fraud losses (Mastercard Chargeback Field Report 2024). Global card-not-present fraud projected to reach $28.1 billion by 2026. U.S. merchants lose $4.61 for every $1 of fraud. The United States accounts for 42% of all global card fraud losses despite handling only 25% of card transactions.

Structural Weakness

The chargeback mechanism was designed to protect consumers from unauthorized transactions. It functions by allowing a cardholder to reverse a completed payment. That reversal is possible because no cryptographically attested, immutable record exists at the time of settlement that binds the transaction to a verified participant identity and a documented payment instruction. Every payment in the current card network is reversible. This is the architectural condition that friendly fraud exploits: file a dispute, claim the transaction was unauthorized, and receive a reversal regardless of whether the underlying transaction was legitimate.

With Pre-Settlement Attestation + Proof-Backed Finality + Dispute Evidence Trail:

Legacy Card Network Settlement vs JIL Sovereign Attestation

Legacy Card Network Settlement JIL Sovereign Attestation
Every completed payment is reversible via chargeback Attested settlement carries immutable proof record; fraudulent reversal has no evidentiary basis
Legitimate dispute requires week-long record reconstruction Legitimate dispute resolved instantly against attestation ledger query
70% of chargebacks estimated to be fraudulent misuse Fraudulent chargeback cannot reverse a Yes-attested, proof-backed settlement
CNP fraud: merchant cannot verify cardholder identity Transaction attested against verified participant credentials before settlement
Anomalous transaction patterns detected post-settlement Out-of-corridor or anomalous transaction triggers Review verdict before settlement proceeds

Current-State Problem

  • Every settlement is reversible via the chargeback mechanism
  • Friendly fraud: legitimate transactions disputed as unauthorized
  • CNP fraud: no cryptographic cardholder verification at payment time
  • Dispute resolution requires manual record reconstruction across siloed systems
  • Dispute rates rose 78% YoY; merchant recovery rate approximately 8%
  • BEC on vendor payment instructions: $2.8B in misdirected payments

JIL Attestation Intervention

  • Pre-settlement attestation creates immutable proof record at time of payment
  • Legitimate disputes resolved against attestation ledger evidence
  • Fraudulent reversal claims cannot override a proof-backed Yes verdict
  • Transaction corridor validated against merchant category and participant baseline
  • Anomalous patterns trigger Review verdict before settlement proceeds
  • Vendor payment beneficiary binding blocks BEC account substitution
Attestation Verdicts: Yes -- Attested, proof-backed, corridor valid No -- Unverified counterparty / Account mismatch Review -- Anomalous pattern / High-risk corridor

Impact

Chargeback Reduction

Fraudulent chargebacks cannot reverse a cryptographically attested, proof-backed settlement

Dispute Resolution

Legitimate disputes resolved against attestation ledger query; week-long reconstruction eliminated

Merchant Revenue Recovery

Structured dispute evidence reduces merchant representment burden and increases win rate

Strategic Upside

Proof Links

Request a Proof of Concept

See JIL attestation infrastructure applied to your specific credit card and merchant settlement corridor.

Request a POC ← All Corridors

or email support@jilsovereign.com