Lewisc said:Are you permitted to re-sell the tickets? The question isn't how long before the game you shipped the tickets. HOW LONG DID IT TAKE AFTER THE AUCTION FOR YOU TO SHIP the tickets? It's not the buyers fault you decided to aution off your tickets before you received them. Aren't you required to ship within 30 days?
Did you auction your tickets when your payment was due?
JoeThaNo1Stunna said:I'd estimate that over 90% of tickets sold on eBay are sold before they are actually in the hands of the buyer. The bottom line is everyone who purchased tickets got them and most got them months in advance. A whole lot of people ended up getting free tickets. And PayPal screwed me out of over $2,000.
Lewisc said:Actually it doesn't sound mean it sounds criminal. She paid for the items and you're refusing to ship. It's really not her fault you're having a dispute with pay pal.
Suppose she paid you by check but a creditor had a lien on your checking account. You'd be in the same position. Would you still refuse to ship since you'd be unable to get the cash?
Pay pal could ban you. The buyer paid and you're refusing to ship. Sorry but you'll be earning the negative feedback.
JoiseyMom said:Hey, get off your high horse. She is not doing anything criminal. She explained to the buyer what is going on. Can you afford to lose 350.00???? The buyer will get their money back from paypal. She can still buy the item from another source if need be. Why should Kat be out the money and the item becuase Paypal is being unreasonable.
I think she is doing the wise thing. Yes the buyer paid, but if she can't access the money then what is she to do. Just say hey, what's 350.00??? The person will get their money back from Paypal. She is doing nothing wrong, Paypal is. Paypal should make their system FRUAD proof. It's possible, if they want to invest some money into it. If someone used her Paypal account then paypal should have the expertise to track that money down, and it isn't in Kat's account. The account holder doesn't have the access or the resources to track down these people, that is Paypal's job. If Paypal can't or won't do it, then they shouldn't be in the business they are in.
Just my .02!!
dreams91 said:I guess I still don't understand why paypal took the money back anyway...![]()
RichNKatHolly said:Of course, if the payment was a check and my account was frozen I would have shipped the item. That would have to be something I did that warranted such an event (like a judgment, lien, etc). I work in the legal profession and would definately cooperate with something like that.
Unfortunately paypal does not tell you why they have frozen the account. You just get an email that says you are limited and have to do x,y,z to restore access. I don't agree or wish to provide x,y,z so I will forfeit my right to the account. If I had access to the person's money I would refund it immediately, but I do not, nor do I have $375 to repay the person for whom I listed this item (it is a vintage Gucci bag). If I was to ship it I would owe my friend the $$ and it would have to come from my pocket.
You are right that most problems stem from international transactions. Paypal will not confirm most international addresses to protect the seller but will still protect the buyer if they claim non-receipt. It's slightly unfair that way.
I'm not saying that everyone should close their paypal account. These methods they use are outlined in their policy (most of us do not read this). I'm just bringing to light what can happen to anyone ACCEPTING payments. Most using paypal just to buy will never experience a problem unless their account is accessed due to fraud.
JoeThaNo1Stunna said:I had my account frozen and they say it is because I had user complaints filed against me. These were people who I gave full refunds to, who received their products. They were for Washington Nationals tickets for games from April-October. Most of them got their tickets at least 3 months before the game. They complained because they didn't get them immediately after purchasing them, that is only because I did not get my tickets until a week before the season started.
I explained this to PayPal and they said I would have to refund these people to be reinstated. Well I refunded them all, so they got their tickets for free... PayPal then decided to permanently close my account b/c of this.
They reversed a withdrawal of $2,700 to my checking account... I can't access this money until November. I can't afford to attend summer school this summer b/c of this and I may not graduate on time.
BEWARE OF PAYPAL!![]()
Lewisc said:I am puzzled. If paypal freezes your account isn't there a way to tell your side of the situation? I understand when the dust settles paypal may side with the buyer and you'd be out of luck but don't they have to tell you what the problem is? International funds come into your account and you withdraw them immediately. Limits paypals ability to recover the funds if there is a problem. If the buyer says the Gucci bag is counterfeit paypal really has right to know they can get the funds back easily.
Your warnings may be of interest to some but A LOT OF BUYERS, myself included, wouldn't think of using a seller that didn't take paypal. I take that back, if the seller was major company that directly accepted credit cards I wouldn't have a problem.
threeboysmom said:There's one thing I don't understand though. You're saying you received an email from Paypal about your account being frozen and it was a GENUINE email from Paypal and not a fraud?? I receive these emails all the time and have just deleted them immediately never thinking that one of them could actually be real. I'm assuming you didn't click on any of the links and simply deleted the email, right? And then you opened a new window and logged onto your Paypal account and saw that it was indeed frozen as the email stated??? I guess I've always assumed that Paypal or Ebay would call a person rather than sending an email especially with all the fradulent emails circulating around.