Merchants who have been blacklisted by a payment processor often approach the rebuilding process with the goal of restoring conventional payment acceptance as quickly as possible. For merchants whose blacklisting resulted in MATCH list placement, that goal is realistically five years away through the conventional processor path. For merchants with processor-specific blacklisting that did not reach the MATCH list, the path back to conventional processing may be shorter but is still uncertain. In either case, operating without payment processing in the interim is not a viable option for most businesses.
Deploying blacklisted merchant crypto payment processing through 27 Blockchain does not require the merchant to wait for the blacklist flag to be resolved before restoring payment acceptance. The integration can be built and deployed on a timeline determined by the technical scope of the checkout integration, not by the status of any conventional processing dispute or MATCH list resolution process. Merchants who choose to pursue conventional processor restoration simultaneously can do so while operating the 27 Blockchain crypto payment gateway as their primary payment acceptance channel. The two paths are not in conflict, and having a functioning payment infrastructure in place through 27 Blockchain reduces the pressure to accept unfavorable terms from conventional processors who may be willing to serve blacklisted merchants at significantly elevated cost.