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We require the sender to confirm the email to reduce the amount of email typos/etc. If the gift message does go to the wrong email after that then the recipient will not receive the message. However, sender are NOT charged for any gifts unless they are accepted by the recipient. We have worked through many of the issues with junk mail and spam filters and have not encountered many if any issues as we improved the system.
But with this particular service, a couple of things are unclear to me:
1) How long does a recipient have to claim a gift?
2) If the recipient of the gift doesn't claim it, do you get your money back?
I could not find anything on their site about this. I would hate to think I would be charged for an item if the recipient thinks that the email from them is spam/scam & deletes it.
Re how long does a recipient have to claim a gift.... Orders expire after 30 days. We are implementing reminders to let senders and receivers know the status of unclaimed gifts and to minimize the amount of gift messages that go overlooked or lost.
Re money back.... Customer are NOT charged unless a gift is accepted. We do not make this clear enough on the site, but we will. Thank you for pointing this out.
I would also suggest that since their gift notifications would presumably be unsolicited emails informing people they've received a gift, that they remain alert to the potential for phishing, identity theft... and skeptical gift recipients.
Definitely a solid idea, and other vendors should offer this service.
If you don't have their email address of Facebook profile (and soon other social network profiles and mobile telephone numbers), then you may be out of luck. Hopefully you'll have at least one of those pieces of information to send someone a gift. We do force senders to confirm a recipient's email address to minimize the amount of mistyped email addresses (this should not be an issue with Facebook profiles as the sender clicks the receiver's picture and name).
The message the recipient receives has the sender's return address and a personalized message from the sender that should "prove" that the gift is actually from the sender. We have had a positive experience thus far with this methodology.
All information is kept private - that is, senders do NOT get receivers' physical addresses and receivers do NOT get senders' payment information. Etc.
Senders are not charged for any gift unless it is accepted - we do not make this clear enough on the site, yet.
Senders and receivers are kept apprised of the status of the gift (i.e., you are notified when your gift is accepted).
Our Facebook application (reachable at http://www.tinyurl.com/tigerbow) allows for anonymous gifts (to secret admirees).
Thanks again for the feedback - feel free to keep it coming.
Bright Neighbor has solved this, but it comes down to a system of trust.
http://www.techsoomer.com/tigerbow-life-virtual...
I've been in the software business since before there WAS a software business, so I'm pretty jaded and not very easy to impress. I like the Tigerbow idea!
http://stereogrammes.org/
see www.real-gifts.com
crooks!