Paypal Deals Blow To Freenet 595
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."
Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Interesting)
I mean, Come on, Paypal, you of all people should know better! (FP?)
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Informative)
It's more likely that they shut down freenet because they were using an anonymous email address. I'm sure you can see where an anonymous email address could be a bad thing for a company that wants to make its money transfers secure and trackable. Paypal recently placed a hold on my account for my use of fake DNS information on my domain unlogged.org (the whole idea of which was to create a form of private computing by not logging anything). I removed the account, verified my other email addresses, and everything was flowing again within the week.
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Insightful)
Talk about YMMV. It all comes down to how much you trust Paypal...
Exactly. And, in the opinion of a lot of people here, the few major transgressions of PayPal are enough to warrant a strong mistrust. I wouldn't trust anyone else that did this either, as soon as I found out about them. On top of that, it's more the mishandling of complaints than anything. If I have a gripe against paypal, and I present it, I damn well expect it to be resolved, not treated like a by-the-books, scripted response issue.
Hey, they're a business. They treat their customer like shit, they should expect the same from their potential customers. No excuses.
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Interesting)
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.
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Interesting)
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.
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:4, Informative)
Then maybe I should chip in with my experience too? I had my account disabled after I'd requested to have my name on file changed (as I legally had my name changed, and wanted my PayPal account to reflect that fact). They refused to change the name, even after I'd provided the various forms of documentation. Then once I told them to just forget I even asked (I was getting fed up with them - I have better things to do with my time, thank you very much), they disabled the account.
After quite some time of getting no response, I finally got told that to reactivate it, I needed to send in various documentation. Again. Same deal. Same stuff that I'd already faxed them a couple of weeks earlier (and I don't like faxing internationally). Alright, so I play along, give them their stupid papers. After another substantial wait, I get told they refuse to reactivate my account due to the fact that I have multiple accounts and that's against their policy, and that I'll need to close all of them except one. WTF? At this point I was getting seriously pissed off. Needless to say, I don't have multiple accounts. If I did I wouldn't be concerned about this particular one. And how in the blue f*ck am I supposed to close an account when I can't even log onto it?!
After another round of seriously narky emails, they reactivated it, but I've never used it since. I keep it for emergency use only, but as long as I have a choice, they're not getting my business any more.
Re:Paypal are an Electronic Money Institution (Score:4, Informative)
Your average creditcard company is an Electronic Money Institute, but difinitely isn't a bank, and you can only get a card from them when you link it to an account on a 'real' bank.
Neither will this make Paypal a bank, it will amke them more comparable to a card company with regards to their liabilities and such.
And yes, they are trying to be like a bank, however, without officially becomming a bank (so far) and really, much of what they have been doing would not be possible when registering as a bank.
(for example, they would simply not be allowed to charge different fees for non domestic transfers according to EU rules, somethign that makes that I can transfer money free of any fees to any place within the EU nowadays when using my bank for example)
For that matter, try getting an accoutn with Paypal without having a bank account at a regular bank.
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Insightful)
The writeup clearly says "Paypal is sending them a check for their remaining balance." So how is anybody being scammed? They are getting the money that is rightfully theres, and after that paypal no longer wishes to do business with them. I don't see the big deal.
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Insightful)
So what's the terrible, rights-infringing or rights-squashing act performed here?
rights-infringing (Score:4, Insightful)
Alas, I neither agree, nor accept this as a premise: one can not absolve all practises like that on the grounds of pure capitalistic reasoning. Businesses that disregard their contracts do not live in a closed bubble, and the social impact is always there, which is why there are laws too.
And it doesn't matter if they say 'we can change it whenever we want'...well, duh, of course they would *like* that, but imagine companies or businessmen could say that whenever thyey want, then, clearly, clients or customers would soon have no rights at all. It's difficult enough as it is, to legaly fight a company that has the power to hire scores of the best lawyers.
Most companies still try it though, and even here you see a lot of them claiming that, if you purchase something online, you can not just change your mind and return it, or have to bear the costs of returning it when it's delivered damaged/not working, etc. Their defence is the same: "But it says so clearly in our contract!" Well, good try, but the courts (at least here) have ruled otherwise: it still remains an infringement of your rights, even if it's put a hundred times in the contract.
So, you see, it's not as simple as saying "it was in their contract, so they are in their right".
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:4, Insightful)
Ahh... written with a vagueness that defies any counter-argument. And the best part of all is that chuckleheads modded kVanQue up to "informative" when all he did was to repeat heresay with NO link to this implied preponderance of evidence mounting against PayPal. If it's common knowledge that PayPal is evil, then those that slam it don't need to cite their sources, apparently.
The question I pose is this: If kVanQue's statement above is such common knowledge that he need not support it with links or anecdotes, then how is this "Informative"? Surely restating common knowledge isn't particularly informative, now is it?
Yes, I am flaming the tinfoil hat crew.
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Interesting)
But even worse than this, PayPal forces you to be a customer.
I made a purchase from 78s2CD.com> [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.
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:4, Insightful)
I've had some good experiences doing similar things with ebay sellers who require Paypal - when I contacted them directly and explained that I refuse to give out my SS# online (or other info like my bank account numbers), they were good enough to accept Western Union money orders. Those who wouldn't I simply refused to do business with.
Call me paranoid if you wish, but I feel that by not opening myself up to risk by giving out my personal financial info online, I'm doing the best I can to avoid identity theft. YMMV,etc. Personally I'd rather avoid the whole potential mess as much as possible.
SB
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Informative)
They've got no way to revoke the transaction if it's fraudlent. That's your problem to figure out... they're just about getting the money from point A to point B.
That I think is PayPal's biggest problem... they're oriented to the buyer's advantage at the expense of the seller. However, that sender-side revocation capability esentially requires a credit check to even be possible, which means demanding the social security number upfront from everybody in a way Western Union never has to.
Western Union never cares how good you are at future payments of debt... they've got the cash in hand before they'll do their thing.
Not if you use a service like MBNA's "ShopSafe" (Score:5, Informative)
I generate a new credit card number for each and every Internet transaction, and the MBNA ShopSafe software lets me set the maximum amount that can be debited to each disposable credit card number as well as the expiration date (up to one year in the future). The way I handle PayPal is to generate a disposable credit card number with an expiration date of one year and a reasonable credit limit (say $500 for example, or whatever you want). If I were to ever want to rescind my credit card information from PayPal, I do not even have to contact PayPal at all - I just start up the ShopSafe software and tell it to delete the particular disposable credit card number that I provided to PayPal so that no further charges can be charged to that account number. I'm very surprised that as far as I know, MBNA is the only one who provides this type of service, so they have no competition in this area.
MBNA, Citi, AIB - all use Orbiscom (Score:4, Informative)
Apparently AMex has stopped offering the service; [usatoday.com] this article also points out the problem of using such a number to purchase travel if the original credit card is needed to pick up the tickets.
Cahoot and Discover too (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a list of their clients [orbiscom.com] for anyone who is interested.
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:4, Interesting)
Jaysyn
Re:Must have been considered a liability (Score:5, Insightful)
I disagree. They are using discretion. But instead of clearly explaining their position they are using ambiguous terms to disguise seemingly ad hoc decisions as standard operating policy. Their so-called policies are just another form of "anonymous proxy".
Slashdot Uses PayPal (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, having said that, I'd like to hear Pay Pal's side of the story first...
Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal (Score:4, Interesting)
I've never been thrilled seeing SlashDot and other sites like the EFF accepting PayPal.
Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal (Score:5, Interesting)
PayPal, you are free to consider me a "lost customer" at this point. I will take my business elsewhere.
Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal (Score:5, Informative)
Easier said than done, they like to consider you a customer for life. I loged on once and found that they wanted me to agree to a new user agreement which I found objectionable. Well when you call them up they transfer you to different agents who all say they can't close your account unless you accept the agreement. Very Kafkaesque, consider yourself lucky and wise if you never accepted the $10 sign-up bonus. Now I have to change my regular bank so that they don't have any current information and another security breach there can't haunt me.
Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal (Score:5, Interesting)
"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.
Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal (Score:4, Insightful)
Without this meaning to sound as snotty as it will -- huh? What are you talking about? It's an AUCTION. You bid the most you're willing to pay and then ignore the auction until it's over. If it tops what you're willing to pay, you've lost nothing.
Of course, a lot of the time, you get stuff at a lower price if you make your bid in the last 10 seconds of an auction. And eBay should extend an auction by another 5 minutes when someone bids in the last 30 seconds. But if you want to boycott eBay because you aren't bidding enough, you're loony. The loony part was meant to sound snotty, not the other part.
Re:Slashdot Uses PayPal (Score:5, Informative)
surely it would be worth it with a 50,000 member site, even if the individual sales were only relatively small amounts.
i used to accept credit cards inhouse for a subscription type online business and at the time i introduced that i only had about 25 customers.
after the initial setup costs (which were reasonable anyway), a merchant account offered a far better deal than that offered by people like paypal and this way you are in control.
and re; passwords etc; the point is you process inhouse, so all they are entering is their credit card details. there are no new passwords etc to remember. personally, i prefer that method of online sale any day to something like paypal.
i would talk to your bank, it may not be as expensive as you think.
PayPal problems (Score:5, Informative)
Re:PayPal problems (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:PayPal problems (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not defending the heavy-handed operations of EBay/PayPal, but I also wouldn't want to look at things from only one perspective. I think people should be able to do whatever they want with their PayPal money, but really the best thing to do is immediately withdraw what you have as soon as you get it.
Re:PayPal problems (Score:5, Informative)
In one case, the card issuer had authorized a $1200 transaction, then the next day they put it on hold. The package had already shipped. The customer probably could have claimed that it was unauthorized use and kept the package, but thankfully the customer was an honest person.
I know one guy in which his business was bilked out of about $20,000. He simply had the misfortune of dealing with a person that used a stolen credit card number. When the fraud was exposed, the card issuer sued him to recover the money. I haven't talked to him lately, last I heard he said that he'd probably have to file for bankrupcy and lose his business.
Card issuers really don't take much risk in terms of fraudulent card use, often they automatically do charge-backs when a transaction is contested, even if the business took every required means of verifying the card.
Re:PayPal problems (Score:5, Informative)
If they authorized it, they are contractually bound to pay it unless there is a charge back. Charge backs are resolved through their own process and should not directly effect the bank's promise to pay. In the case above, it sounds like the merchant failed to follow the guidelines which are clearly layed out and now he's paying the piper. Different banks have slightly different guidelines, as set by their risk departments. If that store did not check ID and signature or did not swipe a card as as required to ge their discount rate, then they should expect to get it in the tail pipe. It's simply not acceptable for mechants to shink away from their contractual obligations and expect the issuing banks and/or visa/mc to absorb the merchant's mistakes. I can assure you that merchants tend to go out of their way to fail to follow simply contractual obligations and then want to blame someone else. I can't say for sure this is what happened to your friend, but I can say, the odds are greatly in my favor for being correct.
Charge backs, on the other hand, do tend to be in the card holder's favor. Just the same, most banks have groups which watch for fraud from cardholders, as it relates to chargebacks. Additionally, while the odds do tend to be slanted toward the cardholder, as long as the merchant has properly upheld their end, a chargeback can be denied, so long as the merchant made reasonable efforts to address the dispute. Especially if the goods were not returned by the cardholder.
Paypal has had a long history... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Paypal has had a long history... (Score:5, Insightful)
Paypal also has a long history of being business saviour and small business boom tool. Paypal has a long history of neing an easy way to donate to causes quickly - many many noble causes.
Just because people don't make a site paypalisthebestthingsinceslicedbread.com doesn't mean they are all bad.
It is the ONLY way I accept credit cards for eBay auctions. I sell 200+ items a month 75%+ pay with paypal 50% of those paying with credit cards. A merchant account (which places liability on me) is more costly and requires an ENORMOUS upfront cost - plus the funds are not nearly as instanteously mine.
I have to be sent a check from a merchant account, I have the money on a spendable debit card as soon the money is deposited at paypal.
Re:Paypal has had a long history... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Paypal has had a long history... (Score:4, Interesting)
"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 [paypalsucks.com]? They *are* worse.
Introducing the latest nazi type ... *drums* ... (Score:5, Funny)
caveat Paypal means "let Paypal be wary". What you were probably looking for is caveatis Paypal(um)
Re:Introducing the latest nazi type ... *drums* .. (Score:5, Funny)
oh, wait
why? (Score:5, Interesting)
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...
Re:why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Just my opinion...
--
I'm going to support Kerry right until I vote against him on November 2
Re:But they freeze your BANK account! (Score:5, Insightful)
YOU: [ringing bank]
BANK: Good afternoon, Whatever Bank.
YOU: Yes, I just tried accessing my money and it says my account is frozen.
BANK: Okay, can I have your account number please and verification?
YOU: [give info]
BANK: Ah, yes. It seems we received a call from a company in a different state this morning.
YOU: Okaaayyy...?
BANK: And they asked us to freeze your account for no particular reason. So we did.
YOU: Wait a second. You're saying that an unrelated third party is able to just call you up out of the blue and freeze my account in violation of my banking agreement?
BANK: Absolutely, sir. You see, we freeze all bank accounts at the request of any unknown third party.
YOU: So if I asked you to freeze your own personal account...?
BANK: You bastard. Now *my* money is frozen and I can't do anything until you authorize me to unfreeze it.
YOU: Hah, now you know what it's like.
BANK: Actually, we're just joking with you. You see, according to banking regulations, you are our customer. The only time we would ever freeze an account is if the bank is going to be out some money and we need to put a reserve on the money you already have with us.
YOU: But I read on Slashdot...
BANK: Yes, we've been getting calls about that all day. It seems that somebody on Slashdot has been spreading FUD.
YOU: Well, maybe I shouldn't be surprised.
BANK: Hey, it's Slashdot, isn't it? I'll fancy a guess and say that the person who said that didn't present any evidence to back it up?
YOU: Yeah, that's exactly right.
BANK: We have to deal with people like that all day. They make unsubstantiated claims about what PayPal can or can't do. Why, just the other day, a customer said that PayPal sold their home without them knowing it just so that PayPal could recover a chargeback!
YOU: Oh come on!
BANK: No, I'm serious. You'd be surprised what other people can come up with when the burden of proof is absent.
YOU: Actually, I probably wouldn't be. From time to time, I read Slashdot at -1.
BANK: [laughs] On Friday, someone said that the GNAA acquired this bank.
YOU: [laughing hysterically] Oh, that's a good one. Well, I guess my account can't be frozen then?
BANK: Of course not. At least not by PayPal. They would need a court order to do something like that.
YOU: Thanks, that's good to know.
BANK: No problem. Have a good afternoon!
Re:But they freeze your BANK account! (Score:5, Informative)
Something fairly nasty that they will do, is automatically debit your account and pay any company who runs through a check-by-phone type transfer. All that is needed is the information on the bottom of your check and no authorization whatsoever. It's happened to me 3 times now, each time for somewhere between $250-$500.
This is 100% automated. The first time I did a check by phone to pay my monthly providian bill, not only did they charge that, they also charged me for the full $500 balance of my mother-in-law's bill (she lived with me and I guess they figured I'd surely want to pay the credit card bills of everyone!).
Sure enough, the charge came through automatically, no review, not even so much as a check to verify that the name it was put through under was on the account!
I've switched banks twice since and had check by phone frauds nail me at each bank (and yes, the providian thing was the first and only time I actually used a check by phone legitimately) because they ALL process them automatically with NO review and no authorization. Anybody you write a check can charge your account without signiture for up to your full account balance plus whatever the bank will cover for you.
I thought the primary purpose of a bank was to lock my money up and insure in every possible manner that your money can only be removed with your authorization?
I never write checks anymore, I'm afraid to.
Their call, but a borderline one... (Score:5, Insightful)
Since their takeover of the company, PayPal's free-wheeling days abruptly ended. PayPal can no longer be used to fund online gambling of any kind, it can't even be used to fund porn of any kind.
Now, online gambling is of questionable legality in all fifty states and many other places in the world where real gambling is prohibited or heavily restricted. However, most forms of pornography are legal in nearly all parts of the world except where the government is heavily controled by religious influence.
Here in the USA, the government's nowhere close to banning porn.
I think eBay's concern is keeping the PayPal name from being soiled by anything contraversial becase if anybody says "Boycott PayPal... they're helping fund Thing X!", then that indirectly means a boycott of eBay.
Re:Their call, but a borderline one... (Score:5, Insightful)
Not about controversy (Score:5, Interesting)
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.
Re:Not about controversy (Score:5, Funny)
is that he knew exactly where to find those links... especially those penis enlargement pills.
heh.. just making an observation.
Re:Their call, but a borderline one... (Score:3, Insightful)
Whatever.
Anyway I seriously doubt they're afraid of boycotts. What large company is, in this day and age? The world has been conquered my friend. The general public doesn't care enough about anything anymore and they don't boycott anything anymore because everyone wants to have their cake and eat it. If boycotts
Paypal has the right (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Paypal has the right (Score:5, Insightful)
If I own a store, there's nothing stopping me from refusing to serve people with tongue piercings. There's also nothing wrong with people who sympathise with the tongue-pierced from boycotting or criticising* my store.
That whole vote-with-your-dollars principle that's put forth by capitalist theorists as a way of enforcing business ethics? It only works if you do it.
*As long as they don't run afoul of slander/libel laws...
Re:Paypal has the right (Score:5, Insightful)
I do not understand the thinking behind statements like this. What is your point? There is no dispute that a right exists. However, that has nothing to do with whether it is behavior we wish to encourage or discourage or whether the behavior is good or bad for us.
If a company makes a policy we think is harmful to interests we want to promote, why shouldn't we criticize it, even boycott it? The fact that the company has a right to do what it does is not a reason for us to remain silent and do nothing.
If Jane opens a new restaurant and serves only foods loaded with things that are bad for you (and loaded in gross disproportion to any benefit, such as good taste), she has a right to do that, and I have a right, and it is a good idea, for me to avoid that restaurant. It is also a good idea for me to advise my friends to avoid the restaurant.
The fact that somebody has a right to do something means we should not use force to stop them. It does not mean we should not use other means to discourage them.
Re:Paypal has the right (Score:3, Insightful)
If it looks like a bank, and it quacks like a bank, it's a bank. I don't care what the courts say it is.
Contact Paypal (Score:5, Informative)
If you are concerned about whether your account might be at risk due to your political opinions you may wish to speak to their PR contact Hani Durzy at (408) 376 7458. If you are an investor and you would like to see what other political opinions Paypal doesn't like, you may want to speak to their Investor contact Tracey Ford at (408) 376 7205.
Re:Contact Paypal (Score:4, Insightful)
I left a message at Hani Durzy's voicemail box... the number leads directly there since he's out of office...
Paypal can do what they please (Score:5, Funny)
Sad, but unsurprising.... (Score:5, Informative)
They're also scared of anyone or any business that doesn't provide full disclosure of their whereabouts (complete address, phone/contact numbers, and so on). To put it in perspective though, don't forget they're just one of the arms of eBay nowdays - so their primary interest is simply being a facilitator for their own auction buyers and sellers to complete transactions. If you even so much as look vaguely like you do things in a similar way to eBay auction scammers, you'll get cut off in an instant.
Re:Sad, but unsurprising.... (Score:5, Informative)
- If you're taking donations on the web, Amazon.com has a much friendlier service going.
- If you're running a porn site, there's subscription billing companies designed especially for you out there.
- If you're running a low-volume e-store that's not using eBay, you're best positioning yourself on Yahoo Shopping or a simlar storefront-providing network.
- Large volume stores should be handling their own credit card transactions. Contact your favorite bank.
Re:Sad, but unsurprising.... (Score:5, Funny)
Guys who are interested in "larger women" can find them in any chat room.
In fact, that, and "larger" women pretending to be petite women, and other guys pretending to be petite women, is about all you can find in chat rooms.
Not polititcs, but staying out of politcs. (Score:4, Insightful)
The reason for eBay's aquisition of the business clearly wasn't because they thought PayPal would be profitable. However, they saw a problem as the money transfer services of the web's free-wheeling days started to fall... if PayPal were ever to shut down for any reason, eBay's transaction volume would suddenly pulmet with it, wiping out eBay too. They bought it to make sure nothing funny happens with it.
Freenet seems to have steped over the line of things eBay doesn't want to see. It's not that they did anything eBay thinks itself is wrong... they're scared of anything any politically active group might call wrong leading to boycotts. Hello, ??AAs...
Paypal Warning (Score:4, Informative)
previous story (Score:4, Informative)
PP was fined $10 million for violating PatriotAct (Score:5, Informative)
It's not a company I do business with.
Re:PP was fined $10 million for violating PatriotA (Score:5, Insightful)
To a lot of slashdotters that would be a reason to do business with them.
Re:PP was fined $10 million for violating PatriotA (Score:5, Informative)
Maybe they're being assholes because they think freenet might land them another "patriot" act violation? Don't see how it would, but the whole 'anonymous' thing might be catching their eye...
Whatever they are thinking, I'm probably going to be closing my PP account out soon...
Re:Patriot Act? (Score:4, Informative)
Control of the means of production... (Score:5, Interesting)
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!
say what? (Score:5, Funny)
Am I the only one who read this and tried to figure out how it was that Paypal was selling cocaine to Freenet?
another case of ebay's selective enforcement (Score:3, Informative)
No problems in the last year (Score:5, Informative)
Prepare for... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not hard to see how this might happen (Score:5, Insightful)
ebay, who owns payal now, will fold an auction if it feels the temperature outside is wrong.
It's not hard to envision a scenario where the RIAA called somebody up at ebay and said, "Hey, look, we have found a couple of illegal mp3s on freenet and we are going to sue you because you are helping sponser illegal filesharing."
ebay being ebay folded like a cheap card table.
I haven't been on freenet for a while so I do not know what is on there. But it works for your favorite *AA
PayPal == Pusher Man? (Score:4, Funny)
Isn't dealing blow illegal in the US? Freenet should turn PayPal in to the DEA in exchange for immunity.
Anyone know if SCO dealt blow to Freenet too?
Fraud prevention - anonymous proxies disallowed (Score:5, Informative)
Anything beyond that is "Paypal said/Freenet said"
We may not understand exactly what happened. The nature of the closing leads me to speculate that someone was trying to access the freenet Paypal account repeatedly by browsing through an anonymizing proxy server. See Anonymity and Paypal (and other online businesses) [inetprivacy.com] from the Anonymity 4 Proxy Support Pages to get an idea what might happen when you try to access paypal from an anonymous proxy. I'll quote: "So if paypal finds out that you are using a proxy to fool their logon system into allowing you in, you are quite likely to find your paypal account closed. If I'm not mistaken, they clearly state in the user agreement that you can't connect from an anonymous proxy."
The Anonymity 4 support tech is correct. On paypal.com in the User agreement, Under "Closing Accounts and Limiting Account Access" paragraph 2 - "Any of the following events may lead to your account being limited: " "item xvii (Use of an anonymizing proxy;)"
This is not censorship news, it appears more like carelessness on the part of someone at Freenet.
*ALL* banks suck. (Score:5, Interesting)
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.
Re:*ALL* banks suck. (Score:4, Interesting)
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.
PayPal Terminated our Business Account too... (Score:5, Interesting)
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
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
Re:PayPal Terminated our Business Account too... (Score:4, Informative)
While on this topic...
Three good alternatives are:
e-gold
http://www.e-gold.com/
merchant account
http://www.authorize.net/
(url above is a gateway service - works with many banks; has a listing)
Western Union
http://www.westernunion.com/
Ron Bennett
What we need is... (Score:5, Interesting)
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.
Simple - Use NetworkForGood.org (Score:5, Informative)
Paypal does suck sometimes, and they do have many examples of using dubious business practices. So what? Big deal. I don't think they lost any money, did they? Why doesn't Freenet just publicize that they can accept money through NetworkForGood.org [networkforgood.org]? From their website:
You can donate to their 501c3 organization here [guidestar.org], I believe.
The concept is a crock...and they found out why (Score:4, Insightful)
"Without anonymity there can never be true freedom of speech, and without decentralization the network will be vulnerable to attack."
Freedom of speech also hinges on the responsibility of the speaker. If you can say it you should own it. Otherwise the lies have no accountability.
Adam Bridge
Governments Fault (Score:5, Insightful)
Even if the significant government powers to stop and track sucpiscous monetary transactions don't explicitly bar paypal from allowing anonymous accounts (as the page suggests freenet was doing) the considerable influence of the government forces them to do so anyway. After all paypal relies on the patronage of credit card companies who we know would rather bow to government pressure than stick up for privacy. These E-gold type places can continue in the face of this opposition because they don't accept credit cards and they technically aren't transfering USD (rather ounces of gold) so probably fall under less restrictive laws. Most likely though they are simply too small to have been noticed yet.
Face it guys anonymous monetary transfers aren't going to be offered by a for profit company. Such companies have too much to lose by not allowing government scrutiny.
On a related note I wonder if Osama would pat up his 35 pounds of gold using E-gold.
Re:Governments Fault (Score:4, Informative)
Credit Cards (Score:4, Informative)
Here's the kicker: I asked that the acocunt be shut and all account details deleted. They could not do that and needed to investigate.
Since that time, many transaction appeared on my car for Online Casinos etc Presumabely by the person that hacked the PayPal account..
It ended with cancelling my card with my bank and claiming back all the transactions I hadnt made.
Lesson: Unlike many online merchants that (supposedly) delete your CC details after each transaction, PayPal dont, and have your number and details.
one of the many Paypal catch-22s (Score:5, Interesting)
I purchased a product from a merchant online (sleazebag named Big Impressions [big-impressions.biz] 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!
Get a real merchant account (Score:4, Informative)
Warning (Score:4, Informative)
Re:bashing paypal (Score:3, Insightful)
I blocked them from my bank account, wrote a letter to the President of PayPal, and have never used it since. It's a shame - it was a good service while it lasted.
I have never liked their busines
Re:bashing paypal (Score:5, Interesting)
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.
Re:bashing paypal (Score:5, Informative)
Arguably, scammers are getting very clever at their email attacks. They'll send you an email with a link like this: http://www.ebay.com/cgi-bin/verify.dll?Acct=1234 [slashdot.org]
At first glance, it LOOKS legit. And when you click on the link, it takes you to a page that LOOKS like the real thing. Many even have links to the real site. The only way to know that it's fake is to look in the URL bar, and keep your head straight about them asking for passwords and credit cards.
The sad part is that companies seems to be doing very little to prosecute these scammers. I've received emails for both eBay and Citibank. Both times I've gotten no response on my fraud report.
Re:bashing paypal (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:bashing paypal (Score:5, Informative)
Good - freenet shouldn't exist anyway (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What an incredible suprise (Score:5, Interesting)
An eye opener about PaypalSucks.com [adzoox.com]
Re:What an incredible suprise (Score:3, Interesting)
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,
Re:this is GOOD news. (Score:5, Informative)
And profit? Are you out of your fucking mind? Toad makes the equivalent of US$1500/month. He could earn more working at McDonald's. Twice within the last six months, the project has had to send out pleas for donations just to afford to pay him that much... And now PayPal, in its infinite wisdom, has gone and screwed the project out of - at the very least - the time it's going to take to find a new method of accepting donations.
Re:PayPal has that right... (Score:5, Interesting)
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.
Re:Anonymity is not a virtue (Score:5, Insightful)
If Paypal doesn't like the aims of the Freenet project, perhaps they may be within their legal rights to drop the account. But it's certainly not very ethical. Suppose other major corporations behaved the same way...
[I'm obviously not claiming that the corporations I've named have any such policies; they were chosen arbitrarily as examples.]
Nice try. (Score:5, Interesting)
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.
That's certainly your perogative (and you would probably be breaking laws if you didn't). Incidentally, I would certainly also do so.
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.