I mean you are saying some will claim a chargeback on product x even though it will show they received the item?
It won't show that
the cardholder received the item, and that's what you need to prove in order to refute a chargeback claim. It's not good enough to prove that
somebody received the item - that somebody could have stolen the card. Physical delivery to the cardholder's address is good enough proof, but is vulnerable to the scenario I mentioned earlier, and if there's no physical delivery, you've can't prove that the cardholder is the recipient.