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"Hidden" PayPal Fees Inciting Community Unrest

Several sites are reporting on the addition of extra fees to PayPal that are just starting to become common knowledge. While PayPal has certainly had their fair share of controversy, the new "transaction fees" that promise to affect the entire customer base are already well on their way to becoming another. "For example, a personal account sending another personal account money for a one-time payment for, say, mowing your lawn was not previously charged any fees on either side, but is now charged the usual transaction fee (the sender gets to decide who pays). The only way to avoid this is by selecting 'gift' when making the transfer — something you can't do if you're following through on a purchase or invoice from someone. And, if you fall into this category (which many people do), it's likely that you had no idea about the changes until just now."

47 of 309 comments (clear)

  1. speaking of paypal..... by Shakrai · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... when is /. going to re-enable the direct credit card payment option for those who want to subscribe? I was a subscriber for the longest time until this option went away. Not everybody is willing to do business with Paypal or has the ability to do so.

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    1. Re:speaking of paypal..... by billcopc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fucked if you do, fucked if you don't.

      The problem with Paypal is that, while they're not an FDIC-insured federally-legislated bank, they behave like one. If you're going to charge me service fees, currency exchange fees, transaction fees, balance fees, "you're a little too liberal for my inbred nationalist sensibilities" fees and "you're selling a big-ticket item so you must be rich" fees, well I expect there to be some very firm rules in place to ensure I get my mileage out of those fees. Dispute resolution ranks pretty high on that list, something Paypal does extremely poorly.

      The reason Paypal is such a bastard ? Lack of competition. Paypal is a bigger brand than all other general-public e-payment gateways combined. Bigger than moneybookers, bigger than e-gold... They get away with it, because they're #1. Because the alternative is to get your own merchant account, and that costs way too much money, involves way too much paperwork, and like any bank service, it gives them way too much power over your business. You gotta do this, you gotta do that, can't sell this, can't ring the same amount twice in a row to a single card, if you sell X we increase your fees, if you sell Y we increase your fees AND your mandatory reserve amount, if you sell X + Y you need to fill out this form and put up with your condescending account manager for a half-hour on the phone.

      Paypal is a hell of a lot simpler than a merchant account, so they get away with murder, in exchange for the privilege of not having to deal with a real bank.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    2. Re:speaking of paypal..... by lordbyron · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually PayPal and Ebay have been very crafty in avoiding the "Bank" or "Financial Institution" claim.

      They are in constant battles with state and federal organizations trying to make sure that they are not deemed a bank as then they would have to play by the rules of the banks. Such as limiting theft, having to take insurance against false or fake transactions.

  2. Still Cheaper... by TheKidWho · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...than using a credit card.

    1. Re:Still Cheaper... by hattig · · Score: 3, Informative

      Infinitely more expensive than doing a simple free bank to bank payment online. In the UK the fees are instantly transferred as well, if you wish, even between different banks.

      Of course, anything less and we'd burn down the banks after their behaviour recently, and their other charges.

    2. Re:Still Cheaper... by adisakp · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's only cheaper until you have you something go wrong with a transaction. I can tell you for a fact that it's much easier to contest a problem with a standard credit card that it is to contest a paypal charge. As a buyer, I got screwed on what turned out to be faked brand-name items from someone in China with an invalid return address -- BTW, I did not plan on buying the item from China... the E-Bay auction "address" was in the US. However, the Paypal account address that I paid was registered to China which is something you might not spot right away. Paypal made me send back the package to China to try to get a refund which costs me a bunch in shipping. Then because they seller gave me a bad address, it got shipped back to me in the US. Paypal never gave me a refund because my item was "never actually returned to seller" even though the seller was at fault for giving a bad address.

      Overall, I was out $100. I try to avoid both Paypal and E-Bay since this incident and only use them after exhausting all other options.

    3. Re:Still Cheaper... by Shakrai · · Score: 4, Informative

      Did you pay for the item using your credit card through Paypal or using your checking account? If you used your credit card you could have done a chargeback through the credit card company and bypassed Paypal's bullshit. Of course you'd lose your paypal account for doing this but that's a small price to pay to recover $100, IMHO anyway.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    4. Re:Still Cheaper... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I use it as a conduit for purchases through my bank account, costs me $0.00 in fees.

      Until PayPay decides to clean out your bank account.

      In which case it costs you every penny you had in it.

    5. Re:Still Cheaper... by Shakrai · · Score: 3, Informative

      I use it as a conduit for purchases through my bank account, costs me $0.00 in fees.

      And your chargeback rights/protection if you get shafted by a bad seller or stupid Paypal policy.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    6. Re:Still Cheaper... by adisakp · · Score: 5, Informative

      Did you pay for the item using your credit card through Paypal or using your checking account?

      I did use a credit card. Unfortunately, I used the "Paypal"-branded credit card issued by GE Money Bank. They have in their fine print that any charge on the card through Paypal has to be resolved through paypal. They will just give you the run-around otherwise.

      First thing I did after this was to tear up and cancel that card and then link my regular credit card to paypal which is a Citibank Card -- Citibank has always been *VERY* *GOOD* at dealing with any hint of fraud whether online or by phone / mail.

      I'm out the $$$ but I've learned an important lesson which I can share with all of you. Don't use Paypal if you can't afford to be shafted -- and if you do use Paypal, whatever you do, don't get the Paypal Credit Card.

    7. Re:Still Cheaper... by Bogtha · · Score: 5, Insightful

      First thing I did after this was to tear up and cancel that card and then link my regular credit card to paypal which is a Citibank Card

      So wait, you got screwed by PayPal, so at the first available opportunity, you gave them your credit card details so you could continue to use their service? This kind of thing is exactly why corporations continue to screw people over - they know they can keep doing it time and time again, and people will just keep coming back for more.

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    8. Re:Still Cheaper... by Abreu · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Unless your Paypal decides to overcharge and your bank charges your for overdraft fees....

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    9. Re:Still Cheaper... by adisakp · · Score: 5, Interesting

      So wait, you got screwed by PayPal, so at the first available opportunity, you gave them your credit card details so you could continue to use their service?

      Unfortunately, Paypal has become a necessary evil if you want to use E-Bay. I try to avoid it if at all possible but many sellers (at least 30-40%) on E-Bay only take Paypal for electronic payments.

      And yes, I'm trying to avoid E-Bay too but for hard-to-find or used items, you can't always find the stuff online or on Craigslist.

      Sigh... basically, that's a problem of dealing with monopolies -- which is what Paypal and E-Bay are for all practical intents and purposes.

    10. Re:Still Cheaper... by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Informative

      Wrong, unless I'm quite mistaken, as I've done a little research into this.

      Those rates you quote are real, but you've conveniently omitted the monthly fees required, or the required monthly transaction volume. Not everyone is doing $100,000 worth of CC transactions per month to get those low rates. Personally, I have a small hobby business making only a few hundred dollars per year (hence the term "hobby"). Maybe I'll eventually get it to grow into something larger, but certainly nothing as large as $100k/month. For businesses like mine, Paypal is the only viable option, as CC processing is very, very expensive if you have little volume. Paypal is dirt cheap: no monthly fees, and just fees per transaction. The currecy-exchange rates are also cheap at 1% over the regular fees. For small sellers, there aren't any good alternatives, except maybe Google Checkout, which has identical rates.

    11. Re:Still Cheaper... by 31415926535897 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I would like to use Google Checkout for eBay transactions, and I'm sure I'm not the only one.

      However, eBay specifically forbids it. I don't know why. Well, I do, but then I don't know why the FTC doesn't smack them down hard for such anti-competitive behavior.

      Why can't people just DO WHAT'S RIGHT?

    12. Re:Still Cheaper... by Shakrai · · Score: 3, Informative

      I don't know about this. A foreclosure, for instance, will certainly "tank" your credit score, as would an auto repossession. An unpaid fee of $30? I really doubt it. I'm not a credit expert by any means, but I don't think anything that small does much to your credit score

      Your wrong. With collection items it has less to do with the amount that's owed and more to do with the fact that there's a collection item on your report. I'm sure the amount owed factors into it to a degree but just having a collection item on your report will tank your credit score. Even a paid collection item will tank your score until it gets to be a few years old and/or falls off.

      Plus, you can write to the credit bureaus every month requesting it be removed, and if the bank misses responding even once, it's gone.

      You can do that but eventually the bureau will stop responding to your dispute requests and just send you form letters back saying the item was already investigated. The best way to do this is to file the dispute right around the middle of December. The holidays play havoc with work schedules at the banks and credit bureaus. I successfully disputed all but two negative items off my report by doing this.

      Just make sure you dispute the item(s) based off a report that you either paid for or obtained because you were denied credit. Don't ever dispute something based off one of the free reports. When Congress passed the law mandating that they give you one free report per year they included language that says they have 45 days to respond to disputes from those reports. If you get the report through another means they only have 30 days.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    13. Re:Still Cheaper... by lordbyron · · Score: 3, Informative

      They actually do not have to adhere to Reg E not being a banking or financial institution.

      I have worked on a few accounts where this has happened and unlike the comment above about ruining your credit the problem with it is then your bank puts you on a list that does not allow you to open a bank account with any other bank. Sort of a non-banked black list.

      Basically your only recourse is to pay the bank fees and beg paypal. If they say no you have to go the states attorney route. Good luck with that.

  3. Probably just the first step by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It'll be an outrage for a month, then the world will settle down. Then they'll start the membership fees.

    I think I'm just going to close my Paypal now - I only ever used it because I didn't have a credit card, and I trust the guys over at Steam with my credit card number.

    1. Re:Probably just the first step by Shakrai · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think I'm just going to close my Paypal now

      My account was closed for me when I sold an item to someone on eBay who later claimed that he never received the item. Paypal locked my account over this dispute and claimed that I needed to provide them with a tracking number to get the block removed. I did so and then the buyer changed his story from "I never received it" to "he sent me an empty box"

      In spite of the fact that his story changed once confronted with the tracking number they still sided with the him and permanently blocked my account until I "repay" them for the money they reimbursed him. If I hadn't already transferred the funds into my checking account I would have lost them and the item I was selling.

      As far as I'm concerned Paypal can burn in hell.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    2. Re:Probably just the first step by BabyDuckHat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, the article is about PayPal charging more for their service without out notifying customers.

    3. Re:Probably just the first step by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This seems to be a common complaint, but it's hardly specific to PayPal. Merchants accepting credit cards get stuck with charge-backs all the time, and from what I can tell (from second-hand reports, anyway) the credit-card dispute resolution process isn't much better for sellers than PayPal's.

      The simple fact is that PayPal has no way of knowing which side is in the right. Maybe you did send an empty box, and the apparent change in story was just a misunderstanding. After all, the buyer did consistently claim not to have received the item; perhaps they simply didn't consider an empty box worth mentioning until you brought up the tracking number. The only way to avoid this sort of issue is to have a mutually-trusted third-party mediate the transaction rather than dealing directly with the buyer/seller. Unfortunately, that's only a practical solution for relatively expensive items. For everything else, well--sellers are fewer in number, deal in higher volumes, and are generally regarded as being more capable of absorbing the cost of proving their side of the dispute, or otherwise taking the occasional loss. This isn't a great solution, but it's the best available at present.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    4. Re:Probably just the first step by seizurebattlerobot · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You're kidding, right? Paypal didn't send a mass e-mail to all its users saying "Dear Customers, We're jacking up our fees!". Instead, they sent out a mass mail that said "Dear Customers, We updated our Terms of Service. By doing nothing, you agree that you accept the changes."

      Take a look at Paypal's legal page. The Paypal "Terms of Service" are actually 14 different agreements, all written in legalese, all saying that they can be changed at any time for any reason by Paypal. All together, the agreements add up 4000 lines, give or take. Not every user is subject to every agreement (some are for specific services), but many are.

      So can you really say with a straight face that you believe it is reasonable to expect Paypal users to reread 4000 lines of legalese every time Paypal announces that they've made some change to the agreement? It's not like they're providing diffs. They do not want their customers to understand these agreements or how they have changed because they are dishonest. That's the crux of the issue - Paypal is acting in bad faith to screw their own customers and hiding behind legalese when called out on it.

    5. Re:Probably just the first step by ACMENEWSLLC · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I quit doing business with PayPal, and thus eBay, after they wanted direct access to my checking account to do any further business.

      What they really need to do is create an escrow service where I send PayPal my $, the seller sends them the goods. Goods are verified by paypal as best as possible with perhaps pictures sent to me. As the buyer, if I'm okay with that verification then they release both the goods and the funds.

      A decent fee should be associated with it, even if rejected by buyer. Perhaps arbitration fees for deciding who is at fault for rejection.

      This would not be something everyone would use, but when you are dealing with very expensive merchandise that is small such as computer devices it would be nice. A high MP photo of that Cisco management blade that costs over $10,000 would have revealed it was a clone built in China and not authentic.

      My thoughts.

    6. Re:Probably just the first step by Mursk · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I have a hunch that they figure out who to side with based on how valuable either party is to them. If you're an infrequent buyer screwed by a big-time seller, kiss your money goodbye, and vice versa. If both parties are frequent users, maybe they just take the hit. If both parties are infrequent users, it wouldn't surprise me to hear that they do what you describe above. If X is less than the cost of a recall, we don't do one (oops, wrong shady business on that last one).

      --
      "This thing does science so hard, you say, 'I've never seen that much science.'" -Sam
    7. Re:Probably just the first step by schmiddy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The simple fact is that PayPal has no way of knowing which side is in the right.

      I partly agree with what you're saying, but a big problem here is that eBay has effectively shut out all other forms of payments to further their Paypal monopoly. To quote from them: "Checks, money orders, and bank wire transfers arenâ(TM)t allowed for most eBay purchases. "

      If eBay still allowed USPS money orders as payment, in addition to avoiding the 2-3% Paypal fees, unscrupulous buyers would have a strong disincentive to lie about not receiving their items; the USPS can and does investigate cases of mail fraud, and mail fraud is a felony. Paypal, on the other hand, could give a rat's ass whether the buyer is lying about not receiving the item...

      --
      http://cltracker.net -- powerful craigslist multi-city search
    8. Re:Probably just the first step by ajlisows · · Score: 5, Informative

      Often times the Paypal "Dispute Process" can be really messed up.

      I used to sell a lot of stuff on EBAY when I was unemployed for a period of time. I'd buy things in bulk and sell them off on EBAY. It wasn't making me rich and it was a lot of work but it was helping me get by a hard time....until they started making things difficult for me.

      The worst problem was a $27 transaction. The buyer paid and a day later my account was locked. The reason? Apparently at some time the buyer was a victim of credit card fraud so they decided it was fraud again....and because I was receiving the money I MUST be involved. Both of our accounts would be locked pending a paypal investigation.

      I had about 60 packages I had to ship out very shortly and the money to do that was...in my Paypal account. Being poor and unemployed, I didn't have nearly enough money to cover it outside of that account. I talked to the guy with the $27 transaction on the phone and we decided to just call Paypal and get them to cancel it. No way. We were both under suspicion of criminal activity. In the meantime, I had another 70-80 auctions end but the Buyers could not send me money because of my frozen account. Obviously "Paypal froze my account" didn't inspire confidence so few of those people worked with me and I got stuck with EBAY seller fees.

      I tried to explain the situation to the other people I owed goods. Some asked if I could just refund their money. I agreed to that but...guess what? I couldn't! As time wore on, they started getting mad and filing more complaints. By the time the original was cleared up 23 days later I had another 30 or so complaints where.....I couldn't refund the money. Ebay Fees hit (That money could come out) which left me with not enough money for all the refunds anyway. Of course, they started hammering my bank account after that. Luckily I got a job shortly after and was able to make sure everyone got their merchandise or money....but Paypal just destroyed me, my once spectacular Ebay reputation, and my bank account. It was absolutely ridiculous.

  4. I quit using paypal a long time ago by jerep · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ever since they began taking a percentage of my transactions, I stopped using Paypal whatsoever for the freelance work I do.

    Paypal was nice when it began, but the more time passes the more annoyinng it becomes.

    1. Re:I quit using paypal a long time ago by ottothecow · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Not that I don't prefer things sans fees but do you really think it is unreasonable from them to change you a small amount for your *business* transactions?

      If you want to accept credit cards, paypal is by far the easiest way to do so since you don't need to qualify for a merchant account and get set up with a card processor.

      The anger here is split between the fact that they added the fees without really alerting anyone and the fact that until now their business model had always been to give people free access for personal and near-personal (small scale ebay selling etc.) and then charge fees to the business users who receive payments. People would get comfortable with using the service as a buyer (no fees) and then as a small scale seller (fees only on CC based transactions) before becoming a true revenue stream for paypal when they move a business onto paypals system. Paypal has a lot of annoying stuff going on and maybe some fees are too high (although the real fee problem lies in their parent company getting double fees since you basically have to use paypal with ebay), but I am not sure that charging a small amount for business transactions that cost them money on a site that is otherwise cost and ad free is that big of a problem.

      --
      Bottles.
  5. Buyer protection by qoncept · · Score: 4, Informative

    I don't know any details, but I'd imagine you'd be waiving any of your buyer's protection rights by sending money "as a gift" instead of for a good or service.

    --
    Whale
  6. $514 fee to collect $514 reversal by Lookin4Trouble · · Score: 4, Informative
    I thought this one was good, had a transaction that went sour, seller was supposedly in Orlando, FL, but ended up being in Bangkok, Thailand. Item was obviously defective, returned at my expense, with proof, and PayPal sided with me on the claim, letting me know they had the money from the other person's account before I sent it. Posted proof that it was sent, and received a credit of $0.00. Net cost to me for the nothing I now have in hand: $514.00 for initial transaction, +$78.30 to send the item back to Thailand for a grand total of me getting shafted in the amount of $592.30

    I'm just fucking thrilled with PayPal right now, can't you tell?

    1. Re:$514 fee to collect $514 reversal by scharkalvin · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The ONLY way I pay though PayPal is via my American Express card.
      One time I had a problem and PayPal was zero help. So I directed my
      complaint through Amex. Good old American Express came down like a ton
      of bricks on PayPal and REVERSED the transfer, which got PayPals attention quick!
      All of a sudden, PayPal was in my court and got the seller to fix things.

    2. Re:$514 fee to collect $514 reversal by scharkalvin · · Score: 5, Informative

      You went about it all wrong.
      I tried to get a seller to pay for return shipping when he sent
      the wrong item (his description was wrong). When the seller wouldn't
      see things my way and PayPal wouldn't help, I just told Amex I had
      a complaint and wanted the charges dropped from my account. Amex did
      their OWN investigation and reversed the charges on PayPal. Finally the
      seller issued me a refund AND paid the cost for return of the item, at which
      point I shipped it back to him. I then told Amex that the problem was fixed and
      they and PayPal finalized things.
      NEVER use a bank account to fund a charge with PayPal. You give up too much
      clout.

  7. Oh yeah... by Seakip18 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I had this problem a few weeks ago.

    If I remember correctly, you have to switch to the personal tab and make sure the source is a paypal balance or a bank account

    They even tell you what costs what when you send the money and click "When fees apply" link.
    Here's the excerpt from Paypal:

    Personal transfers to friends and family

            * Fully funded by:
            * PayPal balance
            * Bank account

            Free Free

            * Fully or partially funded with:
            * Credit card
            * Debit card
            * PayPal credit

    2.9% + $0.30 per transaction
    Fee is paid by the sender or recipient-sender decides.

    I used my bank account to pay a friend, so it was free. Though, if it were anything more serious, I would be leery since I can't do charge back or other convenient stuff.

    The writer does NOT mention that in the article what source the money came from.

    Perhaps another person could say why the bank account/paypal is free and the other stuff costs money.

    --
    import system.cool.Sig;
    1. Re:Oh yeah... by tsstahl · · Score: 3, Informative

      Perhaps another person could say why the bank account/paypal is free and the other stuff costs money.

      Because it costs Paypal money to run your credit card. They have to pay processing/transaction fees for credit cards just like any other merchant. However, they are still making money. I guarantee that with their usage, they can negotiate CC transaction fees in the 5-15 cent range with a percentage take of 1.5-7%.

      Bank and paypal accounts are 'free' because of the practices surrounding those types of transactions.

  8. Screw em by TheRealMindChild · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Between Ebay and Paypal fees, I can't sell anything for $10 and still break even (meaning I get nothing out of selling the merchandise). So I said screw em and now anything that needs sold goes on Craigslist.

    --

    "When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
  9. Never mind that, it's the 100% fee that gets me. by jeffb+(2.718) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I sold an expensive (~$1800) camera package for a friend on eBay. Got an instant PayPal payment, with a confirmed shipping address, but no other communication from the buyer.

    Shipped the package to the Texas address via UPS Ground. Followed the tracking info as it hit various points, and eventually made it to the destination...

    ...where it bounced, launching an exception that the "recipient had moved", and that it was being "redirected to the new address". An address which happened to be within 50 miles of my own address. The "buyer" continued to ignore emails.

    Called up PayPal, explained that I'd shipped the package to a confirmed address. They said, "Yes, you should be covered under Seller Protection." I then explained that it had been bounced to an unconfirmed address, without any action or agreement on my part. "Oh," they said. "If you can't provide proof that the package has been delivered to a confirmed address, you aren't protected."

    "So," I ask, "you mean that I can send a package using your approved shipper, with your approved tracking, to an address that you've confirmed -- and if the "recipient" redirects the shipment somewhere else, they can then claim that they never received the package, and I'll lose my payment with no recourse?"

    "Well, I'm afraid so."

    "So I guess I'd better recall the shipment and eat the shipping fee." "Yes, if I were you, that's what I'd do."

    And that's why my eBay/PayPal annual sales volume has gone from five figures to one figure (0).

  10. Mod parent up by hack++slash · · Score: 4, Informative

    eBay have a stranglehold on the online payment situation, they've banned the use of Google Checkout.

    --
    To do something right, you often have to roll up your sleeves and get busy.
    1. Re:Mod parent up by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Only if you explicitly say "Google Checkout", I put in my auctions That I DO NOT accept paypal but have 'my own' credit card processor. Of course all I do is send them a Google Checkout invoice via e-mail and they pay it.

      I'm sure if I started selling to someone that worked for paypal/ebay I might get caught but 99.9% of people out there don't give a damn.

  11. Re:they must charge by vertinox · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Also, they must obviously pay for their operations. I don't understand how someone could expect a financial transaction service to be free.

    It shouldn't be free as much as it should be cheaper.

    There is no point to micro-transactions anymore with Pay-Pal because of the fees and people are too afraid of their revocations without recourse to sell expensive items through them.

    Sadly there is no alternative for ebay these days so people have stopped using it.

    --
    "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
    -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
  12. unlicensed by lophophore · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Paypal is operating as an unlicensed bank. I am amazed that the Feds have not already come down on them. And don't get me started on Ebay...

    --
    there are 3 kinds of people:
    * those who can count
    * those who can't
    1. Re:unlicensed by GPLHost-Thomas · · Score: 4, Informative

      In USA, I don't know, but in EU, it's considered and registered as bank already.

  13. Re:Never mind that, it's the 100% fee that gets me by Renraku · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One PayPal and eBay got together, eBay was already on the way out the door. Everyone had already found out that there just MIGHT be someone out there willing to pay $50 for a $10 pair of speakers, and that it MIGHT be pretty trivial to scam people out of money for a living. 80% or more of eBay is totally worthless to most people due to this.

    So now what you have now is a company that makes its money from transactions, and settling a dispute wastes more time than its worth. For every scammed item or payment, there's one side that's unhappy, and one side that's happy. For a net gain of 0%. One person stops using it, the other person continues using it. All they have to do is maintain a decent user base and they'll be around for a while.

    Of course, like most companies, they aren't looking to the future at all. They aren't trying to change things to sustain their business.

    --
    Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
  14. I don't think I got that email by dangle · · Score: 5, Funny

    I found my notice from PayPal on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying
    "Beware of the Leopard."

  15. Paypal blames eBay, eBay blames Paypal. by Peet42 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I made an eBay sale recently. The charges, when I placed the auction, amounted to 50p, but by the time Paypal took them from my bank account they had quadrupled to £2. On an item that only sold for £15 this amounts to a 10% surcharge. But who is getting the extra £1.50?

    eBay say that the discrepancy is down to Paypal, Paypal say they're just passing on eBay's charges. Yet, as far as I can gather, they are the same company?!?

    I get the feeling they are "bouncing" small amounts like this back and forth between the two divisions in the hope that nobody will notice, or at least that we can't be bothered chasing it up.

    I wish more sites accepted Google Checkout.

  16. PayPal needs to be regulated like a bank by hellfire · · Score: 4, Insightful

    PayPal works with money like a bank or credit card, but they are treated like an internet Western Union on steroids, and yet most of the public is trusting them like a bank, which is a mistake.

    PayPal needs controls like bank. The majority of their transactions may be okay, but that's like 95 to 99%... of billions. That's way too many bad transactions. They need to be made more secure, particularly for consumers.

    I avoid PayPal like the plague because I don't want to become a statistic.

    --

    "All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"

  17. Cutting Their Own Throat - I Say Let 'Em by GumphMaster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My high 5-figure online business recently ditched PayPal because despite the various fees and commissions a bricks and mortar bank merchant facility was marginally cheaper and, here's the big one, they never reject a valid credit card. They also don't require nineteen types of personal information to process a simple, small payment. In the name of security PayPal occasionally would reject perfectly valid cards from customers with a good trading history (in one case several of the customer's cards were rejected). PayPal would not talk to the merchant about the customer's card, and the customer's time is better spent buying elsewhere rather than fighting to pay through the PayPal "Customer Service*" call centre in downtown Calcutta (that's what it sounds like).

    * Just who is PayPal's customer anyway? Is it the merchant or the buyer, or is it whoever gives PP the easiest option/biggest profit?

    --
    Patent litigation: A doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction... in which everyone seems willing to push the button
  18. Um, that would be "via UPS Ground". by jeffb+(2.718) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And, yeah, I was more than a bit surprised at the way it panned out. I also didn't know that you could recall a shipment; it was certainly lucky for us that you could.

    I honestly don't know what would've happened if we hadn't done the recall. Maybe it was a legitimate buyer, and everything would have been fine. But here's one more "interesting" observation:

    I searched to see who else this buyer had dealt with recently, and found one seller. I emailed that seller (through eBay, very official and everything) asking if he'd had any trouble. He said "Yeah, they tried to reverse the charge and claim that they hadn't received the merchandise, but I sent PayPal the tracking info showing that it had been delivered, and PayPal restored the money to my account."

    Now, on the old eBay, each of us would have negged the buyer, and anyone else getting a bid from her would have seen the recent negative feedback. But, of course, if sellers can leave negative feedback, they can blackmail buyers, or some damn thing. So not only can we not leave negative feedback, warning other potential sellers about this scammer -- we can't even leave NEUTRAL feedback. We're offered the choice of leaving positive feedback, or none at all.

    When eBay supported an open feedback process, it was a great place to buy AND sell. Now, it's pretty much a place for big sellers to move loads of crap, and that's it. There's no way in hell I'd think of using it to sell a popular, high-value item as an individual seller. They've systematically taken away what little buyer protection there used to be, and they've castrated the seller's feedback mechanism -- there's no way to identify problem buyers, and no protection against negative feedback from them.

    If the only feedback you can leave is "good job", what's the damn point?