PreyPal: Upcoming Policy UpdatesAmendment to the PayPal User Agreement
Effective Date: Jul 26, 2011
https://cms.paypal.com/au/cgi-bin/marketingweb?cmd=_render-content&fli=true&content_ID=ua/upcoming_policies_full&locale.x=en_AU “Reimbursements to eBay for determinations under an eBay buyer protection policy
“If you receive payments into your Account from selling through an eBay website and the eBay website offers a buyer protection policy, the relevant eBay website will require you to comply with their policy and their buyer protection resolution process, see for example the US eBay website’s Buyer Protection Policy. This means that the relevant eBay entity may make a determination under an eBay buyer protection policy to refund a buyer and require you, as the seller, to reimburse the relevant eBay entity for the amount refunded to the buyer. If eBay determines that you are required to make a reimbursement to eBay,
you agree with eBay to authorise us, and you do authorise us, to debit the amount of the reimbursement to eBay from your Account and to pay that amount to eBay. You will not receive a refund of your PayPal fees. For more information please read the relevant eBay buyer protection policies.”
Better late than never, I guess, for the eBafia to validate its prior actions by now changing the PreyPal UA.
Without attempting to read all of this latest crap, the first paragraph clearly gives the eBafia the authority to make refunds to buyers from a PreyPal user’s account. If the eBafia then has that right, I assume that, even if there are no funds in the user’s PreyPal account, PreyPal will somewhere have given themselves the right to draw the necessary funds from the user’s banking account or credit card account. Yuk!
It would appear that now would be the time for all PreyPal users to withdraw from PreyPal any authority to draw funds from a banking account and to give PreyPal the authority to draw funds ONLY from a credit card account, where you still have some chance of obtaining a fair mediation process via your bank’s credit card transaction dispute mediation process.
Not only that but any resulting great increase in credit card user disputes against PreyPal—as simply a large “credit card merchant”—may well put a strain on the banks’ credit card mediation processes to the point that the banks may come to consider PreyPal’s performance—as a credit card merchant—as simply “unprofessional” and creating too much trouble for said banks. After all, responsible banks don’t give credit card merchant accounts to “unprofessional” entities, at least not without charging them higher fees to cover the extra work created for the banks due to such merchant’s unprofessionalism.
All a merchant needs to know about the clunky PayPal, at:
http://forums.auctionbytes.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?p=165263 What all buyers should know about the criminal activities of eBay, at:
http://forums.auctionbytes.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=23540 Enron / eBay / PayPal / Donahoe: Dead Men Walking.