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Paypal Deals Blow To Freenet

hankaholic writes "I was checking into the latest progress of the Freenet project when I noticed a disturbing note on their homepage: 'Paypal has frozen the account we use to accept donations over the web, they refuse to give any reason other than "use of an anonymous proxy" [...] all of the projects subscriptions have been canceled which is a significant setback. Other means of accepting donations, including E-Gold, are still active.' Paypal is sending them a check for their remaining balance. The news update on the Freenet homepage also includes contact information for some people at Paypal."

48 of 595 comments (clear)

  1. Must have been considered a liability by dacarr · · Score: 5, Interesting
    But that being said, Paypal is doing this a lot - it's almost as if they're going by textbook rule rather than rule and exercising discretion

    I mean, Come on, Paypal, you of all people should know better! (FP?)

    --
    This sig no verb.
    1. Re:Must have been considered a liability by orthogonal · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Paypal does have a habit of scamming its customers.

      But even worse than this, PayPal forces you to be a customer.

      I made a purchase from 78s2CD.com> (they offer old 78 rpm recordings in CD form, hence the name, and do an excellent job of it too -- it's a great source for vintage Gilbert & Sullivan recordings, among others).

      After I gave PayPal my credit card information, I found I had an unwanted, unasked for account with PayPal.

      So I logged on to PayPal to close the account -- only to find that, in order to close the account, I first had to provide more information in order to activate it..PayPal required my Social Security Number and my mother's maiden name in order for me to activate and access the account, even though all I wanted to do was close it.

      Now, many banks, unfortunately, use this data, Social Security Number and mother's maiden name, to identify customers: by providing that to PayPal, I'd have made it much, much easier for PayPal -- or a rogue PayPal employee, or someone who hacked PayPal's servers -- to gain access to my brick-and-mortar bank account (remember, the credit card number identifies this, and PayPal already had that) or to otherwise steal my "identity".

      Naturally, I didn't want to give this information -- among other things, I have no way of knowing that would be deleted when I closed my account. But under the USA Patriot Act, giving incorrect information to a financial institution might be illegal. So I couldn't just fake it and close the account either.

      So I contacted Paypal, and talked to a rep -- who told me that PayPal could not (sure) close the account, and I'd have to log in and provide my personal information.

      To his credit, when I contacted 782CDs's owner, Jim Lockwood, he apologized, and offered to let me send check in the future -- and even said that he'd ship the CDs before he got the check, on my word that I'd sent it. And now, 782Cds accepts both Paypal and credit cards directly.

      But I'll never buy (or donate, sorry OSS projects) via PayPal again. Even though my PayPal account still exists in some database limbo, neither closed nor fully open.

    2. Re:Must have been considered a liability by hendridm · · Score: 5, Interesting
      they make no claim to be a bank, so why use them as one?

      I agree it's unsafe to leave sizable funds there for an extended period of time, given their track record of unpredictability, however, I'd say they do position themselves as a bank. They offer a Visa bank card, interest-bearing money market account and online bill payment. They want you to keep your money there for awhile (so they can earn interest on it, like a bank) and try to give you incentives to do so.

      For the record, I've had perfect service in the ~4 years I've had a PayPal account, however, I know there are plenty of horror stories out there. I really like PayPal, but it isn't perfect.

    3. Re:Must have been considered a liability by dasmegabyte · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No shit, sherlock. Western Union's not a bank, either, nor is Visa. Neither is a brokerage firm, though many money market accounts are FDIC insured. I still trust my broker not to lose my money between the time I transfer it and he makes the buy.

      Paypal's only crime seems to be offering so many services that it looks a little like a bank...but if you don't have that FDIC stamp, nobody should trust their money there for long.

      However, the services and incetives PayPal does offer are enough to encourage a lot of people to use their services. The whiners who complain about insurance need to step back and ask themselves whether the insurance on two or three days worth of back payments is worth losing those features. I don't think it is. I've never had a problem with PayPal. I HAVE had problems with eGold, click2pay and others.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    4. Re:Must have been considered a liability by dasmegabyte · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Seriously. Sometimes I think all the PayPal haters don't realize how much WORSE the banks and credit card companies are than anything PayPal has done. What, hold a payment to be sure it wasn't fraud? Deactivate some small-change accounts that have suspicious access records? Place an arbitrarily long "clearing" period on any transaction it pleases? Paypal is great because 99% of the time, it Just Works. And it's got great tracking and reporting features.

      Besides, my point of view is this: a guy has an unreasonable expectation of a service. Service does not provide. Guy makes unreasonable demands of said service. Said service carefully continues the process, to be sure they aren't being scammed. Guy gets pissed off and makes ServiceSucksAndIsAScam.org. Meanwhile, the service has figured everything out and sent the guy a check, which he grudgingly accepts -- but leaves the domain live! Basically, one asshole can lash out and make a lot of bad press based on completely unreasonable demands.

      We had a kid who used our hosting service but never paid us. Kept putting up porno pages in direct violation of our co-loc's TOS (thus endangering everybody on the server). One day, four months into this, he asks for a hand with CGI. I say sure, help him, and ask when he intends to pay us. In exchange for this, he puts up a website bashing our service, and calling us money-grubbers. Considering 85% of our sites owe us money at any given time, we're anything but "grubbers." Still, in this delusional pervert's eyes, we were out to get him. Thank god my superintendent knows the kid and could smack some sense into him...that completely libelous and unwarranted bad press would still be out there, otherwise, because we haven't got the money to send his (poor) new ISP a C&D.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
    5. Re:Must have been considered a liability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      A woman I know used PayPal to collect donations for a politically related charity. PayPal froze the account without a specific explanation. They simply sent some standard form mail stating that the TOS allows them to freeze the account for any reason without explanation for a certain period of time.

      There's no evidence to show that any of the fairly small number of donators sent any complaints so we're certain it was a third party with differing political views.

    6. Re:Must have been considered a liability by Chester+K · · Score: 2, Interesting

      however, if you read those stories about paypal scamming you will say that paypal has a nice record of unkept promises.

      You can find websites that claim the same about any company larger than a certain size. I've used Paypal since they were still X.Com, I've processed thousands upon thousands of payments through them, and I've had no more trouble with them than I have from any brick-and-mortar bank I've dealt with.

      There are two sides to every story -- keep that in mind when you go to paypalsucks.com and read the stories about how PayPal "screwed" the always "completely innocent" complaint filer.

      --

      NO CARRIER
    7. Re:Must have been considered a liability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Paypal doesn't get interest on your money, according to it's User Agreement

    8. Re:Must have been considered a liability by Jaysyn · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Let me get this straight, Paypal disabled the account because of an anon. email address, but yet they have a physical address to send the check off to. Something is fishy.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
  2. Slashdot Uses PayPal by johndiii · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Absent a satisfactory response from PayPal, Slashdot should stop accepting PayPal to pay for subscriptions.

    --
    Floating face-down in a river of regret...and thoughts of you...
    1. Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal by loggia · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Hear, hear.

      I've never been thrilled seeing SlashDot and other sites like the EFF accepting PayPal.

    2. Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal by Surazal · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I've been uneasy about using their service despite the "convenience" it would offer me in the online world. The horror stories keep piling up, and I don't see an end to it.

      PayPal, you are free to consider me a "lost customer" at this point. I will take my business elsewhere.

      --
      --- Journals are boring; Go to my web page instead
    3. Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal by secolactico · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I've never been thrilled seeing SlashDot and other sites like the EFF accepting PayPal

      "Me too!" *ducks*

      Seriously, I used to use Paypal for auctions and donation to certain sites, but then, one day they decided they didn't like my country, so I'm now unable to use them. Now I cannot subscribe to Slashdot nor patronize other sites that take only Paypal.

      I realize that it's very convenient for webmasters and Paypal probably offer ease of use or somesuch, but for potential customers from unsuported countries, we are SOL.

      Nor do they seem to have plans to support my country any time soon.

      --
      No sig
    4. Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If you really want /. to stop taking PayPal, just call PayPal and complain about Slashdot and how they screwed you. PP will freeze the /. account and then the staff will be forced to switch to BitPass or some other more reasonable donation method.

      Posting anonymously to avoid getting in trouble.

  3. fear of terrorism strikes again by 778790 · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Looks like Paypal is trying to cover its ass in case any "shadowy' Freenet money finds itself coming through from America's enemies(TM).

  4. why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    why do people put up with this crap?

    i refuse to get paypal for the simple reason that one small complaint (which paypal won't divulge) can lead to them freezing potentially thousands of dollars.

    they are NOT a bank, and don't need to be accountable! yet they offer bank like services...

    1. Re:why? by derF024 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      After all these reports of complaints why are people still letting their money "sit" in paypal.

      Because every business gets people who are unhappy with the service, and those people are *always* the most vocal. A happy customer tells, on average, 4 people about a good experience. An unhappy customer tells, on average, 10. I've gotten nothing but good, reliable service from paypal, and so has everyone I know who uses paypal. I'm not going to run off and register "paypalrocks.com", though.

      Now, why do I leave money in my paypal account? Because I earn around 3 times the interest on my paypal account versus my bank account, and paypal gives me 1.5% cash back whenever I take money out of the account. Paypal's web interface is also leaps and bounds ahead of my bank's web interface and it's always more up-to-date.

      I like freenet, I think it's a good project, and I'm not too happy with paypal for pulling a stunt like this, but to tell you the truth, my real banks (I've been with 3) have done much worse. My current banks (Fleet, and a local credit union) send me junk postal mail faster than I can dump it in the garbage, and all of it has sensitive information on it that makes me wary of just throwing it away. My previous bank (Citibank) would habitually make "mistakes" and deposit my money into someone else's account.

  5. Control of the means of production... by br00tus · · Score: 4, Interesting
    That sucks. I just got a DSL line and threw Freenet up on my computer at home. It really makes you think of what a Nazi-like authoritarian world we live in that even a few people using a little p2p network that gives them some degree of anonymity is a threat to the system, as it might help put them beyond the jackboot of authority.

    Freenet is a p2p pioneer - it actually came out before Gnutella did, and only one month after Napster launched. I like the applications that use it like Frost as well. Of course, a project like Freenet takes a lot of development time, needs lots of high-bandwidth 24/7 nodes running it and updating, and pile all of the authoritarian, anti-freedom people on top of that and you can see why awesome things like Freenet have trouble getting off the ground.

    It's unfortunate that my programming skills are such that I can't make much of a contribution to Freenet - and that my monetary situation is such that I can't afford even a small donation. My programming skills are improving however, and perhaps my monetary situation will improve as well. I enjoy developing p2p applications because it is intellectually challenging and also because I feel its ultimate aims are good. Not all problems can be solved technically though. A boycott of sorts might be good - perhaps there should be a campaign to use eGold instead of Paypal for paying, and let Paypal know about it. Not only could people receiving money stress eGold, or some other competitor, or even drop Paypal, but people contributing money can refuse to use Paypal. I'm really sick of all of this crap!

  6. Not about controversy by phorm · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well, yes, I'm sure that ebay wouldn't want to have anything to do with a topic so controversial as pornography or sex. Certainly they would be very careful about products that were probably not legit in such areas. And certainly, they wouldn't want anything to do with dubious internet privacy software.

    I think that if ebay is concerned about such issues, it's in a direct relation to profit/controversy... guess that freenet just isn't profitable enough for them.

  7. Re:What an incredible suprise by adzoox · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Paypalsucks.com is sponsored by Paypal's competition. Anyone who disagrees with the moderator has their IP address blocked from entering the site. Most thos that post are spazz freaks who couldn't handle a normal transaction anyway.

    An eye opener about PaypalSucks.com

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
  8. Good - freenet shouldn't exist anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When I first heard of FreeNet I thought, "Wow what a cool idea!" I downloaded the software needed to make a node, and made one, and ran it for about a month. Then one day I started browsing around on it... and like someone said above, there were links that claimed to be kiddy porn etc. I never clicked on them - but that's what they claimed to me. I shut my node down, removed FreeNet, and haven't looked back. The idea is a great one, but as usual the humans involved fucked it up and corrupted it.

    1. Re:Good - freenet shouldn't exist anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      None of us (well, apart from the obvious tiny minority of fucked up individuals that put them there) like the fact that what purport to be child abuse images exist on the network. We accept however that it's an inevitable consequence of a strongly anonymous system. We don't retrieve them or link to host freesites so that we don't assist their propogation, but we cannot actively supress them.

      Freedom is binary, you have it or you do not. You have freedom to say and publish anything anonymously, or you don't. As soon as you start introducing "bad" content detection/censorship mechanisms then we lose our plausible deniability defences and it can be found that we acted in bad faith by being willfully ignorant of our encrypted datastore contents.

      Yes, it's sad that such content exists on Freenet amongst numerous other more legitimate uses, but its continued presence does at least demonstrate that Freenet is already pretty damn anonymous. If evidence of serious crimes can be distributed on it then you can assume that minor crimes such as the warez, mp3 and movie distribution occurring on the network isn't in any trouble. Freenet is also used by Chinese dissidents to voice their discontent, again by extension you can assume it's a totally safe place to discuss US foreign policy without ending up on a PATRIOT act shit list or suchlike.

  9. Re:What an incredible suprise by adzoox · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The point would be that; how can the other less known payment sites be any more reputable than Paypal which has stockholders to please? I'm sorry you found the article poorly written - it is linked on over 50 websites and I was complimented by a major news organization for it's insight.

    I also find it very hard to believe that you read my post. visited the link, and typed a critique all in the span of 14 minutes. You must be trolling,

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
  10. Re:bashing paypal by ShaunC · · Score: 5, Interesting
    account was "hacked"
    I wonder if maybe that has something to do with the freeze? Everyone's first guess seems to be that PayPal cut off Freenet because they didn't approve of the project, but the whole bit about "use of an anonymous proxy" has me curious.

    The Freenet project leaders have said they've never logged into PayPal through a proxy. Maybe someone else was trying to brute-force the project's PayPal password through a proxy? Maybe a large percentage of Freenet's donors, being generally privacy-minded types, used proxies when they logged into PayPal to send money to the project? PayPal is known to freeze accounts which have been sent fraudulent funds, whether they know it or not; maybe now they're freezing accounts which receive funds sent from someone using a proxy.

    I really hope PayPal provides an official explanation.
    --
    Thanks to the War on Drugs, it's easier to buy meth than it is to buy cold medicine!
  11. Re:bashing paypal by technogeeky · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually, I am not one of those. I have never responded / clicked / touched a single email from paypal. If I get an email from PayPal, I go to the PayPal website manually and see what's going on. Don't be so quick to assume - it took PayPal two months to "resolve" the issues going on (someone had done this same technique with thousands of accounts over a short period of time). Even PayPal didn't understand how he/she had access to the accounts. They said they had no record of a login, either.

  12. Re:not true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    On the other hand, if a customer is drunk you can throw him out. But you can't throw somebody out just because you don't like them

    As a business owner I can do anything I want to. I could throw all brunettes out and offer blondes a 10% discount if I choose.

  13. Re:PayPal has that right... by madcow_ucsb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Refusing service is one thing. But the main reason people are pissed about paypal is they have a tendency to refuse service..*and* not let you get your money out of your account.

    Happened to two of my friends. One had over $5000 in there for a couple months before they decided that no, he didn't actually do anything wrong and wrote him a check. This is definitely a company that needs some more regulation. It looks like a bank and acts like a bank. But it isn't governed by any of the laws that real banks are.

    Terminating an account and mailing you your balance is fine. Annoying, but fine. Holding your money hostage? Definitely not ok.

    That said, with the number of people this happens to, you'd have to be a retard to keep money in the account. I use paypal, but *only* via credit card and I sure as hell don't leave any money with them.

  14. Re:PayPal problems by nacturation · · Score: 5, Interesting

    PayPalSucks.com is certainly a shady company. To find out why, go to adzoox.com/paypalsucks.html

    --
    Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
  15. *ALL* banks suck. by EvilStein · · Score: 4, Interesting

    PayPal isn't a bank, #1.

    How about having a bank not only freeze your account, but bar you from getting an account for FIVE YEARS?

    Yes, it's called "ChexSystems" - a private company. US Bank will throw you into ChexSystems for very minor mistakes, even if you pay them off. I closed my US Bank account years ago, but a check for $20 went through after it was closed. US Bank did nothing to notify me. No letter, nothing.
    Finding a bank that does not use ChexSystems is next to impossible.

    That sucks far worse than PayPal, to say the least.

    1. Re:*ALL* banks suck. by sweede · · Score: 4, Interesting

      man, i know exactly what you are talking about, except i had a lost a checkbook, reported the range of numbers, closed that account and got a new one w/amcore bank. This was done at an office, not over the phone.

      about a month later i get a letter in the mail saying that my account (the closed one) was overdrawn ~400. called up amcore and they said that they never recieved any notification of lost/stolen checks nor a cancellation of my account. soon after ( a few days), i get another bounced check statement and then a letter to go to court. i got it fixed in court (judges rock), but the would not fix my account with the credit agencies. this was almost 4 years ago and i have ~3 years left before that is cleared off my credit record.

      closed the new one and got a US Bank account, Never had an amcore account again.

      --
      I follow the SDK and GDN principles.. Spelling Dont Kount, Grammer Dont Neither
  16. PayPal Terminated our Business Account too... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    PayPal notified my one company, Psychotropics Cornucopia, Inc. http://www.psychotropics.org/ , Thursday May-15th 2003 via a "canned" email (see below for the full text of it) that stated in part: "Due to the severity of the violation, or your accounts history of repeated violations, your account will be permanently locked".

    The only email notice we received from PayPal/Ebay terminating our account - no advanced notice, no discussion, just abrupt termination.

    ------

    > Date: Thu, 15 May 2003 14:52:54 -0700
    > To: Ronald Bennett
    > Subject: PayPal (KMM30070882V34963L0KM)
    > From: "customercare@paypal.com"
    > Reply-To: "customercare@paypal.com"
    > MIME-Version: 1.0
    > Content-Type: text/plain; charset = "us-ascii"
    > X-Mailer: KANA Response 7.01.102
    > Message-Id:
    > X-UIDL: [4O"!%U*!!oXj"!SHg"!
    >
    > Dear Ronald Bennett,
    >
    > We regret to inform you that your PayPal account will be permanently
    > locked for the following reason:
    >
    > * engaging in activity expressly prohibited under the Acceptable Use
    > Policy.
    >

    They further stated that we violated their Acceptable Use Agreement by selling illegal drug paraphernalia. It's obvious from their "canned" email that no one from PayPal ever actually examined our company, our many services, nor our past PayPal transaction history. We only sell advertising, videos, and memberships (non-adult) - NOT pipes, etc.

    We opened our PayPal account back on June-21-2000 and in that time we *never had any disputes* and we *never had any reversed payments* - an amazing record given our activity. We had a "Business account" (which costs much more than a personal account) with PayPal and yet they never attempted to call us nor email us regarding their actions until after they terminated our account; all they sent was one brief automated email - not exactly customer service.

    We requested more details from them regarding why our PayPal account was abruptly closed, but we never any response other than automated emails that mentioned nothing we didn't already know. PayPal was very convenient and served us well for nearly 3 years, but no more.

    Our experience should serve as a warning to others who rely on PayPal ... doing so can be disaster ... many folks think the above can't happen to them until it does, then it's too late.

    On the bright side, we'd already begun phasing PayPal out prior to them suspending our account, but I personally know of several people who have lost substantial amounts of business due to PayPal "problems".

    Ron Bennett

  17. What we need is... by jonwil · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have said it before and I will say it again.
    What we need is a replacement for paypal that is just as easy to use (e.g. for payments online etc) but which follows banking rules and doesnt do the crap paypal does.

    As for paypal itself, if they were more open about account freezes and gave people a chance to sort things out, they wouldnt get anywhere near as much flak.

    One of the biggest reasons for account closures is this:
    person a pays money into a paypal acct
    person a then pays person b
    person b either leaves the money in their paypal acct or takes it out and into their regular bank
    person a then (for whatever reasons) issues a chargeback or bank thingo and wants their money back. Paypal now freezes the account (and often the bank account and such as well) of person b while they sort out the whole mess.

    What paypal should do is to tell person b that person a has done the chargeback and now wants their money back. That way, person b can give paypal such money as is necessary to resolve the chargeback with person a's bank and the whole issue would sort itself out.

    Another good idea if you use paypal is to set up a seperate account just for dealing with paypal. At any given time it should only contain money about to be transfered into paypal or money thats just been transfered out of paypal. If you transfer money out of paypal to this account as soon as you get it then transfer it straight from this account to your regular account, paypal cant touch it.

  18. My Response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Transfer to: Bank Account
    Funding Source: PayPal Balance
    Total Amount: -$106.67 USD
    Date: May 17, 2004
    Time: 22:31:56 CDT
    Status: Pending

    Tell PayPal that you don't like their business practices by not letting them have your money.

  19. So I cancelled by rsletten · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So I cancelled my paypal account in protest and gave them my reasons in their survey. Did you?

  20. Re:Paypal has the right by statusbar · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Go see The Corporation and find out how and when corporations got to be seperate legal entities with the same rights as a human.

    --jeff++

    --
    ipv6 is my vpn
  21. Maybe sites like Slashdot... by Yaa+101 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Maybe sites like Slashdot need a open source mergant to handle donations for all sort of open source projects...

  22. Re:PayPal problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Credit card companies are one of the few organizations who almost always side with "the little guy." Having had some bad chargeback experiences, I can say that the CC companies are real hardasses when it comes to being even-handed. They will almost always side with the cardholder, even with a total lack of evidence from either side. Even when the merchant has evidence that the cardholder did authorize the charge, the CC companies more often than not will give in to the cardholder. It's very frustrating.

  23. Re:Paypal has had a long history... by Txiasaeia · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I'm going to have to disagree with you here. Their policies are draconian, as evidenced by the fact that they refuse to have anything to do with Freenet, even as little as holding some funds for them.

    "Amazon is a standard business, they sell merchandise and they're directly responsible." Not true. They have a network of used product sellers ("Buy it used!") over whom they have little to no control. Amazon still has an excellent rep, Paypal doesn't.

    "Pretty much anyone can just hop in and start doing business through them." Exactly, you just pop in a credit card number, pay for shipping, and you'll get your book/dvd/whatever in a few days... oh, you meant PayPal!

    "What I'm saying is that when you have so many people from any walk of life, you're going to get a high volume of garbage." You've just described the customers for every single online business. What makes PayPal so special?

    "Not advocating them or overlooking their crap, but anyone (or company) who deals with so much bullshit is likely to: 1) have a strict policy, 2) make mistakes. They could be worse and they aren't." Have you read PayPalSucks? They *are* worse.

    --
    Condemnant quod non intellegunt.
  24. one of the many Paypal catch-22s by mabu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I ran into a problem with Paypal recently, explifying how they're they're there for you until you really need them.

    I purchased a product from a merchant online (sleazebag named Big Impressions out of Arkansas (avoid these losers). They took my money and then didn't ship the product when it was ordered. I complained for several weeks and was blown off. By the time I complained to Paypal, it was just past 30 days from the transaction and Paypal refused to investigate because the transaction was 30 days old, so I got screwed.

    Based on my research, in the absence of any terms, a merchant has 30 days (domestically) to ship a product, but Paypal requires you to report the problem within 30 days, so by the time the merchant legally screws you, Paypal doesn't have any responsibility to investigate. It's totally useless. Thanks for nothing Paypal!

  25. Have you ever been on Freenet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I installed Freenet and played around with it a bit. While I appreciate what they are trying to do, (free internet and all) I uninstalled it shortly thereafter because I don't feel comfortable with pedophiles using my computer's hard drive as a store for their kiddie porn. Actually, kiddie porn (and the occasional mp3) is about ALL I found on Freenet. I decided that this is a project that I cannot morally support (at least with my bandwidth) and perhaps PayPal made a similar moral decision. It's just like a brick and mortar store; they have the right to refuse service to anyone. I just wish PayPal would be a little more moral with the rest of their business transactions.

  26. Classic sampling bias error by Solandri · · Score: 3, Interesting
    You are a merchant. You deal with many customers but few merchants. Of course the vast majority of the fraud you experience will be by customers.

    A customer deals with many merchants but few or no customers. Of course the vast majority of fraud they experience will be by merchants.

  27. Another victim of PayPal account freezing by radd0 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    This sounds like a trend...

    I too have been subjected to PayPal "review" this afternoon. Twice in one day they asked me to re-confirm my personal information, which I did successfully each time. Then an hour later I received an email that they are freezing my business account until I can provide them with:

    1. A bank statement and signature card

    2. A valid photo ID (drivers license or passport)

    Without any warning whatsoever they have disabled any ability to send outgoing payments, but will accept incoming no problem (while it collects interest on their account).

    My favorite part?

    "Please do not reply to this e-mail. Mail to this adress will not be received and therefore, not answered."

    No voice phone number to reach them at, not even an email address. Just a fax and a web form. Talk about customer service.

    I too will be focusing my business transactions elsewhere.

  28. Nice try. by warrax_666 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Even if it worked ideally, it means your server could be passing, say, child porn.

    Yes, but it also means it could be passing, oh, I don't know... information about a planned organized revolt against an opressive government or inside company information from a whistleblower about e.g. pollution of ground water. Welcome to the double-edged sword of truly free speech.

    If I ran a server and someone was engaged in such nefarious activity, they would be "censored" pronto, as in rm -rf *-

    That's certainly your perogative (and you would probably be breaking laws if you didn't). Incidentally, I would certainly also do so.

    -how in the world can not knowing what's going on (the Sgt. Schultz method?) be an improvement?

    It's the difference between being a common carrier and not being one.

    If I participate in FreeNet, I'm basically saying: "Here is some disk space and network bandwidth, use it for whatever (and I mean whatever) you want -- I neither care nor do I want to know what you use it for.". IOW, I'm donating resources for good or bad.

    Not knowing (or being able to know) what is actually stored on your computer gives you (morally, if not legally) common carrier status.

    But nice try.
    --
    HAND.
  29. Re:Maiden name and ID theft... by Technician · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Now, many banks, unfortunately, use this data, Social Security Number and mother's maiden name, to identify customers

    Prevent fraud! Think of Mother's Maiden name as PASSWORD. Talk to your credit folks. Most will allow the use of a password consisting of alphanumeric text instead of your mother's maiden name. Use something like telephone5649. It makes it easier to fight fraudulant accounts (ID theft). Call the suspect account holder and ask if a password or name is being used. Tell them if it's a common name, then it's an ID theft account. Let them know you use a password instead. Do it for all your accounts. I found most CC companies and banks permit this. It makes seperating the legit from the fraud simpler.

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    The truth shall set you free!
  30. PayPal Semi-Alternative www.virtualbank.com FDIC by dave1g · · Score: 2, Interesting

    www.virtualbank.com

    Check it out on www.brankrate.com for virtual bank's money market accounts.

    Unlike PayPal they are FDIC insured and the interest rate is 2.15% compared to PayPal's 1%

    THIS IS A REAL BANK.

    While it doesn't provide the money transfer features that PayPal does, its better safe haven for your money. And still nice and accessible from the internet.

    I'm not sure if you can hook up virtualbank to paypal like you can other bank accounts, but it seems feasible.

  31. This could be down to by SpaceJunkie · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Freenet was originally a nice idea, and unfortunately became a haven for nasty kiddie pr0n. Paypal have recently been in court over cases saying they were funding kiddie pr0n stuff- when in effect they were receiving payments for them. Since this point - I suspect that paypal have stamped hard on anything they think is vaguely connected- and might get them into furthar trouble. I hate to say it- but I agreed with freedom of speech until I saw freenet.

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    OrionRobots.co.uk - Robots From sol
  32. I'd actually like to use PayPal by Mawbid · · Score: 3, Interesting
    ...but I can't.

    I signed up in order to donate a few bucks to Wikipedia when they solicited donations for a backup server.

    When you first sign up with a credit card, they don't know if you're using a stolen card so they invented this clever scheme of determining whether you're the real card holder. They charge the card two bucks, and you check your statement and see a charge from "PAYPAL XXXX", where XXXX is a 4 digit code. You tell them the code to prove you received the statement. Neat huh? Yeah, well, I only got three digits.

    I tried using the three digits alone or suffixing or prefixing a 0, no dice. Support didn't (or pretended not to) understand the problem. I spent two bucks and got nothing in return. Instead of sponsoring Wikipedia, I effectively sponsored PayPal.

    Has this happened to anybody else?

    --
    Fuck the system? Nah, you might catch something.
  33. info, tech, and truth. by jeff13 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ... so this is the truth about information and technology. If you use technology you must offer all you are openly. If you keep secrets you will be shut out. Because only terrorists have secrets.