absolutely - you can always dispute with your credit card company, whereas straight out of your account you'd have a hard time since technically - you sent the money yourself....nola22 said:With paypal, if I pay using a bank account rather than a credit card will have have less security against fraud?
Drawman623 said:I shipped one overseas (Japan) and was ripped off. Paypal chased me for all the money depositied into my account. I paid them fees yet there was no protection for me as a seller. Be very careful. I still feel raw about the misunderstanding. Contact them and get an assurance in writing.
nola22 said:If I buy cue from overseas via ebay and use paypal, how safe will I be in the event of a scam? If I don't receive the cue within 30 days, will paypal refund my money, or is the process more complicated?
Thanks in advance for any advice.
Captain Dan said:Have now received the cue, and it is a fake, confirmed by John Parris himself. Have started the dispute process through Paypal, and will let you know of any problems I have with them. The process takes over 20 days![]()
Daniel![]()
nola22 said:With paypal, if I pay using a bank account rather than a credit card will have have less security against fraud?
nola22 said:If I buy cue from overseas via ebay and use paypal, how safe will I be in the event of a scam? If I don't receive the cue within 30 days, will paypal refund my money, or is the process more complicated?
Thanks in advance for any advice.
jay helfert said:I've used Paypal several times in buying and selling cues.If I am selling, I always wait a few days until they tell me the transaction is complete and verified. Am I safe to ship then?
Most of my transactions have been with U.S. buyers and sellers. I have done deals with people from Canada, Europe and Asia. So far, so good. I have no problem asking someone I don't know to send me a bank check in U.S. funds. I can then get that verified by my bank. If they are unwilling to do this (it's happened a couple of times), I just pass on the deal. Thanks, but no thanks.
My first bad encounter was on eBay last year when some guy from "Pennsylvania" wanted to use the "buy it now" feature to purchase two high end cues I had put up for auction. The total deal was for well over $4,000. He wanted me to ship to an address in Japan after he paid thru Paypal. Something felt funny about the deal and I called Tate. He warned me to be careful, very careful. Turned out this guy had hijacked someone else's account. He wasn't in Penn., but in Japan. His english was a little too spotty to be an American when we talked via e-mail.
If I had shipped those cues, it would have been sayonnara cues and money!
kvinbrwr said:Jay
A payment funded by a credit card takes months to "clear" even though the $$ is in your account. A person using a credit card for payments has a period (generally at least 30 days from the date of the statement that shows the charge) to dispute that payment. If the credit card was used to fund a PayPal payment here's the deal:
1) PayPal learns of the dispute when the credit card company yanks the disputed amount back from PayPal. Now PayPal is short the $$ because they have already released the funds into the sellers PayPal account.
2) PayPal looks at the seller's account. If the disputed amount is there, PayPal yanks that amount back and then proceeds to "investigate" the dispute. Now that PayPal has their $$ back I'm sure you can imagine just how deep their investigation is.
3) If the disputed amount is not in the recipients PayPal account, PayPal locks that account until the seller funds the disputed amount back into his PayPal account so they can snap it up and begin their "investigation".
4) If the $$ is not in the account and he doesn't fund it. PayPal chases him legally just like any bank would and they have the legal nuts, he agreed to all this in the PayPal boilerplate when he agreed as a seller to accept credit cards through PayPal.
PayPal does offer $5000 insurance to sellers over any 1 year period against fraudulent disputes. In order for a seller to qualify he must have signature confirmation that the item was delivered and it must be to a confirmed and verified PayPal address. The last time I looked the only foreign countries that had PayPal verified addresses were England and Canada, so any PayPal payment funded by a credit card to any other Country leaves the seller at risk with no fraud protection.
PM me if you want clarification and we'll exchange phone numbers.
Kevin
jay helfert said:Thanks Kevin.
Always check the sellers account to see what the amount of the PayPal protection is. It can be anywhere from $200 to $2000. If buying overseas it is best to have your PayPal account funded with your credit card. Then you can get refunded thru your credit card co. via dispute. Be sure to check the sellers feedback rating in depth. check for negative responses from other buyers.nola22 said:If I buy cue from overseas via ebay and use paypal, how safe will I be in the event of a scam? If I don't receive the cue within 30 days, will paypal refund my money, or is the process more complicated?
Thanks in advance for any advice.