QuoteMaybe I am not understanding something here, but this idea does not make any sense to me.I'll explain it in detail in two hypothetical scenarios. First these are the terms I have currently:With evidence of a seized order domestically we will repay you 75% / 100%.With evidence of a seized order internationally we will repay you 45% / 75%, alternatively attempt to reship once.For any order that hasn't arrived due to other reasons we will repay you 15% / 50% excluding a reshipment.Scenario #1A domestic customer orders 5 Grams of Hash for 1 BTC.Viewpoint 1: The order gets seized by Customs, the customer does not have a Verification Letter and so gets a 0.75 BTC refund in resolution.Viewpoint 2: The order doesn't arrive since the address is incorrect, the customer does not have a Verification Letter so he gets a 0.15 BTC refund in resolution ( had the customer had a Verification Letter this wouldn't have happened ).Viewpoint 3: The order arrives without any problems, Verification Letter or not make no difference whatsoever.Scenario #2An international customer orders 10 Grams of Hash for 2 BTC.Viewpoint 1: The order gets seized by Customs, the customer has a Verification Letter and so gets either a 1.5 BTC refund or a reshipment in resolution. ( The reshipment would have been included without a Verification Letter )Viewpoint 2: The order gets lost even though the customer had a Verification Letter. I don't see this happening but if it does the customer will get 1 BTC refund in resolution.Viewpoint 3: The order arrives without any problems, Verification Letter or not make no difference whatsoever.I noticed PGP gives different values for encrypting the same text at different times due to how AES operates which was actually news for me, however I have to take it it was news to a few others as no one corrected me on this crucial point.Anyway since I'll have to skip that part I'll go straight to the Address Part, let's say this is my address:QuoteDonald Duck1113 Quack Street Duckburg, Calisota, USAIf I enter this exact data into a text document I should get the following values by using HashCalc:MD5: 869c84d03001d75951c1cbf92733cdefSHA1: 0b5359530a867c1e87b418a8c8a16acdb2d3da0fRIPEMD160: c460db49dfc07807f0c2e5587493fca6e7923516Anyone who uses HashCalc should get the same values as I mentioned above.Now if I enable the option HMAC with Key Format "Text string" and the password "Scrooge McDuck" I get these new values:MD5: 2ebd8dbb59d5381fc9e824df80392168SHA1: 44a5c78bf4a20fc7dad4be633892797312bcd1d3RIPEMD160: cdb77f573e4a3090176e10c6483c4a73a5f294e2The Unique Code used for the Verification Letter could be any of those three values above, and they could only be replicated if Law Enforcement knew it was salted with HMAC with the password "Scrooge McDuck".