I would be concerned about a "Black List," due to law suits for slander, but I suggest we look at the way Ebay handles things. Users are asked give feedback by rating the experience as to whether they satisfied or not satisfied with the transaction, and to comment as to why or why not. It is a factual, case-by-case report on each experience. So, for example, if you see Client X has received 600 excellent ratings and 2 not so hot ratings, you can be fairly well assured that Client X is good to deal with as described on their site
http://pages.ebay.com/help/feedback/feedback.htmlI think the key is to be sure you have the right client. Corporate Name, (LLC, etc) address and even phone no. would be good. I would also hate to see it become a bitch-session. It's much more productive to just see a volume of overall ratings without ongoing and ongoing...discussion.
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