armodilloben
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January 07, 2014, 10:48:58 AM |
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I come to the point that i really hate PayPal (eBay customers using eBay and PayPal Mechanics to hold back payments, forcing me to give discounts) and I started to love to use Bitcoin for payment. Does not matter if its display advertising, food or other transactions done with bitcoin - its fun using it and efficient.
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Mowcore
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January 07, 2014, 10:49:11 AM |
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Good luck Terrahash, hope something good comes from this!
All those mocking his big paragraph? go fucking get your eyes checked, or copy it into notepad and make your own paragraphs you lazy shits lol.
This guy has gone through some shit, I could feel his vibe!
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✰Humble Weekly Bundle.✰Pay What You Want. Redeem on Steam. Support charity. Pay with BTCitcoin now!✰--> Paypal
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willsteel
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January 07, 2014, 12:39:43 PM |
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As much as i would love it that PayPal looses the right to accept credit cards... I dont think this is going to happen. But I would like to know how come that this is point of discussion? Someone else selling CreditCard equipment via PayPal?
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waxaddict
Newbie
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January 07, 2014, 01:17:53 PM |
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Fuck Paypal.
As a little guy just using eBay for purchases and selling random items, apart from the extortionate fees involved, Paypal are a joke.
A week or two ago I bid on a second hand smartphone. Within the hour of sending payment via Paypal the seller messaged me, apologised that the phone had a fault he'd recently found, and he refunded me instantly.
Checked Paypal, refund received but on 'hold'. It took 10 days to be released. Apparently it's standard procedure for refunds. How can they operate like this and still be allowed?
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RenegadeMind
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January 07, 2014, 01:34:31 PM |
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I wish you all the luck in the world and hope you win! I would laugh myself into unconsciousness to see PayPal lose their ability to take credit cards. That would be truly priceless! I take credit cards through PayPal, so it would have an effect on me, but seeing PayPal go down in flames would be just so worth it!
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s1lverbox
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January 07, 2014, 01:38:37 PM |
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as I still think OP is Muppet by writing lasts posts in other threads, I will watch this closely. because IF you succed, u my friend have a large beer from me. PayPal always sucks, day and night. problem with sellers are this: they repeating like addicts...PAYPAL IS SAFEST WAY...bla bla bla. I hope there will be enough room to finish with monopolistyc company's like PayPal and other. succes with this case can be massive step against other shady payments processors.
they will think twice before blocking from using your own money. PAYPALSUCKS.COM
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bigb159
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January 07, 2014, 01:56:37 PM |
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Best of luck, Terrahasher. Never been a fan of Paypal.
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lmazzola
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January 07, 2014, 01:59:20 PM |
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THank you I hate paypal! this is awesome.
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Kungfucheez
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Merit: 10
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January 07, 2014, 02:11:47 PM |
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Something seems...fishy about this whole story. I've never heard of Paypal having anything against bitcoins, especially the actual hardware used because it's just computer hardware.
There must be something else in that mess of a wall you're not telling people.
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BawsyBoss
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January 07, 2014, 02:26:00 PM |
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I really want this to turn towards your favor.
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Forever strong.
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Rassah
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January 07, 2014, 02:35:32 PM |
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Sooooo conflicted. On the one hand, I want PayPal to pay for their BS, but on the other, I don't want them to improve, so that Bitcoin continues to be a much better option
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Misesian
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January 07, 2014, 02:43:16 PM |
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Sooooo conflicted. On the one hand, I want PayPal to pay for their BS, but on the other, I don't want them to improve, so that Bitcoin continues to be a much better option Why would PayPal improve if he wins though?
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bitaggedon
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January 07, 2014, 02:44:06 PM |
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Paypal is full of BS, those clowns almost ruined our business. They automatically process chargebacks without investigation, customers order an item we deliver, customer claims item not received even with full tracking info and paypal just charge us without even looking at the tracking info. I hope they fall hard. We have a new site just for bitcoins and it couldn't have been better.
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TerraHasher (OP)
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January 07, 2014, 02:53:06 PM |
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Does anyone know the BB code for making a paragraph? I have tried 3 times now to fix the post but when i save it it still comes out the same and the HTML p code wont work as i expected. Sorry again for the run on. Me and SMF are not getting along this morning.
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Donations: 1A8anGihV3pvHeuhqzGsAjt2S71WY2qea4
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g35fan
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January 07, 2014, 02:53:23 PM |
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Something seems...fishy about this whole story. I've never heard of Paypal having anything against bitcoins, especially the actual hardware used because it's just computer hardware.
There must be something else in that mess of a wall you're not telling people.
I agree something is fishy with this story. It's not just paypal that does this, all merchant accounts have high risk departments that hold customers money for a certain amount of time. Paypal is just one of the worst because so many of their customers are joe smo's who have no merchant processing backgrounds and deal in high risk/high chargeback businesses (like selling used equipment, and in a notoriously chargeback friendly btc field) Best of luck to the OP suing paypal though, seriously. Good to see someone really fighting. Hope that works out well for you. IMHO, I don't think this will go anywhere, at all.
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2tights
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January 07, 2014, 03:06:35 PM |
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Something seems...fishy about this whole story. I've never heard of Paypal having anything against bitcoins, especially the actual hardware used because it's just computer hardware.
There must be something else in that mess of a wall you're not telling people.
I agree something is fishy with this story. It's not just paypal that does this, all merchant accounts have high risk departments that hold customers money for a certain amount of time. Paypal is just one of the worst because so many of their customers are joe smo's who have no merchant processing backgrounds and deal in high risk/high chargeback businesses (like selling used equipment, and in a notoriously chargeback friendly btc field) Best of luck to the OP suing paypal though, seriously. Good to see someone really fighting. Hope that works out well for you. IMHO, I don't think this will go anywhere, at all. It makes sense to me that Paypal is at odds with Bitcoin, therefore have decided to use these tactics. It's believable, to me.
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e4xit
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January 07, 2014, 03:13:32 PM |
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Does anyone know the BB code for making a paragraph? I have tried 3 times now to fix the post but when i save it it still comes out the same and the HTML p code wont work as i expected. Sorry again for the run on. Me and SMF are not getting along this morning.
i think it might be too long for paragraphs? Could be wrong though, just remember that I tried to Copy/past a long bit of code once and it didn't work...
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Not your keys, not your coins. CoinJoin, always.
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Kungfucheez
Member
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January 07, 2014, 03:17:13 PM |
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Something seems...fishy about this whole story. I've never heard of Paypal having anything against bitcoins, especially the actual hardware used because it's just computer hardware.
There must be something else in that mess of a wall you're not telling people.
I agree something is fishy with this story. It's not just paypal that does this, all merchant accounts have high risk departments that hold customers money for a certain amount of time. Paypal is just one of the worst because so many of their customers are joe smo's who have no merchant processing backgrounds and deal in high risk/high chargeback businesses (like selling used equipment, and in a notoriously chargeback friendly btc field) Best of luck to the OP suing paypal though, seriously. Good to see someone really fighting. Hope that works out well for you. IMHO, I don't think this will go anywhere, at all. It makes sense to me that Paypal is at odds with Bitcoin, therefore have decided to use these tactics. It's believable, to me. Why does that make sense? Paypal has nothing to gain from being against bitcoins. Paypal is not a form of currency. Bitcoins in no way threatens their profits and business model, and bitcoins is not competing against them in any way. My guess is OP did something else to piss them off and they had no choice. I mean, if you are doing a million dollars worth of sales like you said, then all they stand to do is benefit from your service. So you most likely did something wrong you aren't telling us.
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runam0k
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Touchdown
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January 07, 2014, 03:20:33 PM |
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No, there are plenty of stories about Paypal freezing accounts or taking down auctions when it comes to Bitcoin.
Good work OP, good luck with the claim!
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Kungfucheez
Member
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January 07, 2014, 03:25:09 PM |
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No, there are plenty of stories about Paypal freezing accounts or taking down auctions when it comes to Bitcoin.
Good work OP, good luck with the claim!
This describes why very well. PayPal transactions are reversible. VERY reversible - like 60 days after the transaction, I think. That is one of the big advantages of the system, from a consumer standpoint.
BitCoin, on the other hand, is probably the least reversible currency available (and is touted as one of the big advantages of the system). It's not even reversible with a court order, like eGold, which is disallowed on PayPal.
If a PayPal balance was easily transferable to other currencies, especially in a non-reversible way, it would make PayPal much more attractive to crooks, because after scamming people, they would just immediately transfer the money out of PayPal (to eGold or BitCoin), way before PayPal could react and reverse the transaction. If left uncontrolled, this would eventually destroy the biggest advantage of PayPal, which is perceived consumer safety.
As Conor Lynch points out, PayPal does have other safeguards in place against money laundering schemes, such as a rolling 60-day hold on all transactions, percentage-based holds reserved for handling elevated fraud rates, and other measures. But these measures are probably NOT fun and games for PayPal to implement, since they cost both a lot of manual labour, and annoys merchants. A lot of honest merchants get caught in the crossfire of these measures, which then (with righteous fury) describe their experiences on the Internet. As such, it makes sense to eliminate anything that makes the PayPal system attractive for fraudsters in the first place, and currency exchanges (again, this is not a ban against BitCoin in particular, which is most definitely a currency exchange) was probably high on that list. This might also not be PayPal's policy alone - VISA and MasterCard might not be super-happy about currency exchanges either.
The above problem does not exist with virtual goods (such as Facebook credits) because you cannot exchange it for another currency, such as dollars or euros, and is therefore not suitable for the money laundering scheme described above.
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