Escrows can apply the Amazon to the account, or that isn't even needed. Or you can just hand the code over to the buyer. If you don't like this, then you send first to a trusted user.
The above statement shows that you @Gyfts know very little if anything about Amazon gift cards. And this comes from somebody who goes through serious amounts of Amazon gcs every month. Other than this,
your fight is your own business, but I'm happy to watch and learn....
Funny you say "fight your own business" when you don't even know what is going on. He wants people to go first, and not use an escrow. If you don't want to use a 3rd party escrow, use a p2p escrow. Seems like you didn't respond to my earlier comment about chargebacks....because it is the fact and no one should use PayPal with strangers. So your experience seems to mean nothing.
What I said is that this is your own business..I don't know what's between you and what pms you've exchanged. What I wanted to point out is that you do not know how Amazon gcs work, and still you claim that escrow adds value to the transaction.
Also I actually responded to your other "approximate assumption" and you seem to frequently use these instead of actual knowledge, so you please check that thread first. I do know what I'm talking about, both in terms of Amazon and Paypal (this doesn't mean that I support the practices of either company) because I use them daily and also due to the nature of my work I had contact with their technology, so please let's just say that I know more than you do on this particular topic. Plus as I said it multiple times before I happen to have real credentials that would recommend me as a 100% trusted business partner, something that over 99% of the people around here can not say. This is not arrogance...just facts that can be proved easily.