Let's say Person A wants to sell 1 ETH, and Person B wants to buy 1 ETH. They agreed upon a rate. But if I transfer 1 ETH from A to B, Person B will get less than 1 ETH because of gas. But if I transfer say 1.00042 ETH from A to B, person B will get 1 ETH, but that's not fair to person A as he agreed to sell only 1 ETH. What should I do?
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3If you owe $10 to a restaurant for dinner in the US and you pay by credit card, the restaurant owner pays about 80¢ to the credit card company. If you have a mail-in rebate for $10, you get $10 back after paying for postage. If you're talking to your accountant and you grab a glass of water from the accountant, the accountant is paying for your water. If you have a day job and you're paid for 8 hours of work, you still have to get to work, so you spend 9 hours doing work-related activities.– lungjCommented Dec 19, 2017 at 9:02
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So you are saying that me(website owner) should pay the transaction fee– Sai KiranCommented Dec 19, 2017 at 9:08
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1I’m not saying anything of the sort. I’m pointing out there are a lot of norms. This is a value-based/opinion question.– lungjCommented Dec 19, 2017 at 9:10
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1 Answer
You should make a set of rules for your users. If you are not going to pay fees by yourself, just add the line to user agreement about possible transaction fees.
And be sure to specify the range of transaction costs.