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PayPal Settles NY Probe, But Faces Others

Coneasfast writes "PayPal, which is owned by eBay, has admitted misleading shoppers into believing it offered credit-card-style protection and has agreed to pay $150,000 to settle charges. There are many sites out there which are dedicated to the problems of paypal, including PayPalSucks and PaypalWarning." Reader ipandithurts links to this related Reuters story, pointing out that the New York investigation isn't the only PalPal probe: "PayPal's practice of suspending users accounts while investigating suspicious transactions continues to be review by the FTC. While the rate of fraudulent PayPal transactions is less than one-half of one percent, the volume of more than $12.2 billion last year keeps Paypal caught in the middle of many disputes."

14 of 218 comments (clear)

  1. Paypal is a great concept... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unfortunately, if anything goes wrong, you are automatically guilty until proven innocent.

    I have been using paypal for a number of years and only had one issue with them. A guy lost a part for a record player I sold him, then tried to demand his money back claiming I never sent the part with the item ( i did ). He simply reversed charges on his cc and paypal did the same to me, tanking my account to -$1200. I had over 100 transactions with paypal -- this guy?? 0! and I was the one who was guilty.

  2. PayPalDamon by rsmith-mac · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just on a small side-note while we're on the subject of PayPal, PayPalDamon, the CSR hired to specifically work on online relations, has quit as of last week. For those who don't visit any of the forums where PPD visited, PPD was PayPal's public face for those forums, offering PPD as a first contact for forum-goers who encountered any sort of problem(ripoffs, technical issues, etc), and generally kept the geek user base in touch with what was going on at PayPal. At this point, there are no annouced plans to replace him, and he will be missed.

  3. Re:PayPal... by TClevenger · · Score: 4, Informative
    Not only that, but there's usually no protection at all. In my case, they determined that the other party took my money and didn't deliver, but when they went to debit their account, it was empty. Still, the seller was later able to keep using PayPal to receive payments with no penalty--no "lien" was placed on the account to pay me back.

    PayPal reserves 60 days to "investigate" the dispute before ruling--just enough time for your credit card issuer's statute of limitations for claims to run out. Avoid PayPal if you can.

    (Avoid eBay seller 'zmish' as well.)

  4. Paypal alternatives by leviramsey · · Score: 5, Informative

    Probably the best one I've encountered is Neteller. Especially if you're planning on using this to sell stuff, Neteller is much better than Paypal (weekly settlements of the amount in your account in excess of the pre-set "float" are done via check sent through FedEx, for instance).

    I'll be deploying Neteller soon for taking online payments.

  5. Re:forced upgrade by way2trivial · · Score: 4, Informative
    give them a bank account that refuses to allow paypal withdrawals..

    Case in point- netbank, a real fdic insured bank- open an account with very little money, and list it with paypal.. they will make the required pair of deposits into netbank, and you can report the amounts-- netbank REFUSES to allow paypal to withdraw from their account holders.... voila- problem solved (works for me)
    I only put money into netbank with paypal

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
  6. Paypal and EBAY combined = scamalicious! by Classic+Novels · · Score: 4, Informative

    The dynamic duo of Paypal and EBay is probably the biggest source of continuous online scams around. EBay's policies for rectifying a fraudulent sale are absolutely ridiculous. We once put on a multiple item sale and a user whose account was hacked bid on all of them. We were out something like $150 on multiple transaction fees.

    Did EBay do anything when we reported it? NOPE!

    And Paypal payments are not protected despite any reassuring sounds they make. We used to sell on EBay but have stopped, in part because of the risk of getting scammed big-time and not being able to have anything done, either by Paypal or EBay.

    For those of you considering setting up shop online, DON'T EVEN CONSIDER Paypal. They don't have any security features like the physical 3 digit code on most credit cards nowadays, and their policy of freeze-account-first, ask questions later is a joke

    1. Re:Paypal and EBAY combined = scamalicious! by rickbender1940 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Tell me about it! A few days ago I bought about $100 worth of ink cartridges, in several lots of $20 (all from the same seller, the same night). But when they wouldn't ship the items OR issue me a refund, I went to launch a fraud complaint on EBay.

      Guess what? The minimum purchase for filing a fraud complaint is $25! So they didn't do anything at all! It shows that if you want to scam on EBay, just do it in chunks less than $25.

      EBay is a dishonest, crooked business

  7. The problem is fraud by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Informative

    Criminals LOVE to rip people off electronically using credit cards since they believe, rightly so, that it isn't likely to get back to them. Happened to my parents, someone got a hold of their CC info somehow and bought $1000 worth of shit at Gamestop. The bank noticed this (Gamestop is a popular place for stolen CCs), noticed it was way outside of their normal spending, and instantly froze the card and called them.

    Now the problem is, if someone commits a fradulant transaction, the seller is basically SOL if they shipped the goods. The person who's card was stolen isn't liable as per CC law, so the chargeback goes to the seller. Not a huge problem if you are a large merchant, you send it over to accounts receavable, legal, and your loss prevention group. If they find the guy, you sue him for what you lost. A much bigger deal for joe average who does not have these resources.

    So, to try and protect sellers and convince them that PayPal is safe to use, they do things like this. Once PayPal has you bank info and has confirmed it, they can say with a much greater degree of confidence that you are who you claim to be. It's still not certian, of course, but much harder than just ripping off someone's CC#.

    Ya, it's a pain for those of us that obey the law, but it's a necessary evil of online transactions. I jump through a lot of hoops for my buyers, I'm verified with PayPal and eBay, and I'm indipendantly verified by Equifax. It was a pain, but it helps put people at ease that I'm not going to rip them off.

  8. PayPal Problems by Hachima · · Score: 5, Informative

    I really dislike PayPal's policies. As a seller there is no protection against digital goods. I sold something for $250 to someone. Then several days later I get an e-mail from PayPal stateing it was a stolen account and they take the funds out of my account. As a seller I have no way of knowing the account is stolen or not. The owner of the account and PayPal should be held reliable for stolen accounts. Not me as the seller.

  9. A Software Developer's Perspective by Dan+East · · Score: 3, Informative

    I have used PayPal for 3 years now as my primary method of payment from purchasers of my software (DEXplor). In fact, it is my preferred method of payment. Why? For starters, my total fee per sale ($13.95 retail) is only 6% (3.5% + $0.35). That is cheaper than anything else available to me as a small-time independent developer. Online stores (Handango, PocketGear) charge a whopping 30%. Even eSellerate (which I also highly recommend) charges 10%.

    Next, I have a PayPal Visa card that I can use to directly access the money in my PayPal account immediately after a sale, without any additional fees (even if the account is overdrawn). I find that incredibly useful. It also tends to keep my PayPal balance low (most I've ever had in there at a time was still sub-$200). That is good, in that if PayPal freezes my account I have little to lose, but bad because it is too easy to access the funds. :)

    After thousands of sales I have only had one charge-back because the CC was reported stolen after the sale. My account was never closed or frozen. The money was just debited out of my account.

    I'm sure others have horror stories, however as a software developer I really have nothing to lose. After all, the software licenses I sell are virtual, and are of small dollar amounts. Heck, if someone really wanted to get a license illegally they could just hunt down the cracked version of my program and save themselves the larger repercussions of credit card fraud.

    So I guess what I'm trying to get at is PayPal may have its problems, specifically when dealing with actual merchandise of high dollar amounts, but for ISVs it is a very good method of processing payments. After reading this story I will just make sure I never keep large sums of money in my account (which, unfortunately, has never been a problem in the past). It would also be wise to set up a checking account specifically for use just with the PayPal account, to eliminate the risk of tying up any external funds because of PayPal issues.

    Dan East

    --
    Better known as 318230.
    1. Re:A Software Developer's Perspective by RonBurk · · Score: 3, Informative

      Or use SWREG for $1 + 4% and not have to worry about having your bank account frozen. Last I researched it, they seemed like about the cheapest reputable shareware cc proxy.

  10. Re:I'm done by Kris_J · · Score: 4, Informative

    I gave up on PayPal when they started charging an "International transaction fee" when someone outside the US was involved in a purely US$ transaction. There's no basis for that fee.

  11. Re:I'm done by alonsoac · · Score: 3, Informative

    My account is frozen because Paypal lacks the capability to accept credit cards from my country (I can buy at amazon or thinkgeek, just not paypal). I only learned about that problem after they had taken my initial deposit (they have no problem accepting bank wires from my country). So the money came in and it can't go out. For about a year now. Luckily it was a small amount.

  12. Re:I'm done by CreatureComfort · · Score: 5, Informative


    The reason that so many seem to be confused about PayPal not being a bank is because so few people actually understand what a bank really is, or why they are regulated. Most people seem to believe that you give the bank your money, the bank puts it in a vault someplace, and when you want it back, they take it back out of the vault and give it to you. This is essentially what PayPal does, but it is not at all what a bank does. The reason that Paypal is not a bank, and not covered under current banking laws is two-fold.

    Current banking laws, the world over, are generally the result of banking and savings and loan crashes and failures. These resulted in many people losing all or part of the money they had invested in the bank. The way that a bank works is that you deposit your money into an account. The bank then loans your money to someone else. When that person repays thier loan, the bank takes a portion of the interest that person paid (her cost for getting the loan) and gives a portion to you as an interest payment on your account. [Non-interest bearing or monthly fee accounts being a way for you to let them use your money for free is an entirely different rant.] Now while they are loaning out your money, you may want to actually use it to buy something. So banks use a pot of un-loaned money to give you back what you deposited when you request it. It should be obvious that there are [primarily] two glaring problems with this set-up. First, if the bank makes a loan to someone who doesn't pay it back, and the person who's money they loaned out wants to withdraw it, the bank has to get that money from the pot of un-loaned money and pay it back later from the banks portion of the interest payments from other loans. If many, many people fail to pay back thier loans this creates a major squeeze on that pot of un-loaned money, and it could run out. The second problem occurs if the first has happened, or is even rumored to possibly be happening. Since the pot of un-loaned money must be significantly smaller than the total deposits for the bank to actually make a profit, and it is in the banks best interest to keep that amount as small as possible (in other words, as much money loaned out and earning interest as possible), situations have happened where people wanted thier money, and the bank didn't actually have that much on hand. This led to runs on banks, and bank failures, and lots of people losing money.

    Thus we have banking laws. Almost all banking regulations deal with how large the pot of un-loaned money has to be that a bank is required to keep, with how a bank decides who to loan money to, and how much risk they are allowed to take, or with reporting procedures to make sure that the banks are complying with the above criteria.

    Since PayPal never loans money, and all money that is listed in your account is actually on hand for them to pay you at any point, they fall outside almost all of the regulations that banks must follow.

    The other thing that people seem to beleive, which boggles my mind, is that banks have regulations against freezing your account if they think there is suspicious activity on the account. In fact, there are no laws or regulations that say they have to give your money back in a specific time period. If they think that there is suspicious or criminal activity they can, and in some cases are required by law to freeze your account and sometimes even confiscate your money. [Al-qaeda, terrorist fund-raising organizations, drug cartels, human trafficing, other fraud, etc.] If they decide to do this, you have no recourse other than to sue them. Exactly the same as PayPal. (This is particularly U.S. centric, since banking laws vary considerably around the world.)

    In fact, if PayPal were to be placed under banking laws, the only impact that would have on them is a tremendously higher burden of federal paperwork. As long as they do not make loans, almost none of the other regulations would af

    --
    "Unheard of means only it's undreamed of yet,
    Impossible means not yet done." ~~ Julia Ecklar