sherackattack Posted November 20, 2008 Posted November 20, 2008 (edited) this is a true story of how an aussie man tried to settle a payment dispute in his own unique way. i found it quite amusing! http://www.techradar.com/news/world-of-tec...-payment-486872 ALEX Edited November 20, 2008 by sherackattack
andrew399 Posted November 20, 2008 Posted November 20, 2008 Haha! What a classic, i put him down as a legend!! Did you hear that they ended up putting the pic for sale on ebay, the winning bid was $15000!! but the guy said that he has no intention of coughing up the money and just did it as a joke!
jewgaffer Posted November 20, 2008 Posted November 20, 2008 The bloke who bid $15000 for the spider should have done a deal with the aussie. The Paypal protection department would have paid out on it if it only had seven legs. Cheers jewgaffer
sydharbourfisho Posted November 20, 2008 Posted November 20, 2008 The Paypal protection department would have paid out on it if it only had seven legs. Dont be fooled by Paypal, they will only pay you out if they are in the wrong . Not if you lose your money because some d*ckhead overseas took advantage of you. A lot of people don't understand this and hence think that Paypal is the best and safest alternative for online banking transfers. WHAT A LOAD OF CR4P! Screw EBay and screw PayPal.. all PayPal is is another way for ebay to make more money...
flatty hunter626 Posted November 20, 2008 Posted November 20, 2008 couldnt help but laugh that email is a classic:P
Jigholio Posted November 21, 2008 Posted November 21, 2008 Dont be fooled by Paypal, they will only pay you out if they are in the wrong . Not if you lose your money because some d*ckhead overseas took advantage of you. A lot of people don't understand this and hence think that Paypal is the best and safest alternative for online banking transfers. WHAT A LOAD OF CR4P! Screw EBay and screw PayPal.. all PayPal is is another way for ebay to make more money... Too true. The fine print states that PP will only pay out at their discretion and only if they can recover disputed monies from the seller! It's a Clayton's debt-collection service not a buyer protection programme.
jewgaffer Posted November 21, 2008 Posted November 21, 2008 The bloke who bid $15000 for the spider should have done a deal with the aussie. The Paypal protection department would have paid out on it if it only had seven legs. Cheers jewgaffer Perhaps the Paypal protection department might not have paid out on it if it only had seven legs Cheers jewgaffer
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