Recently PayPal incorporated a punitive policy for 'misinformation' in their AUP, which they eventually walked back on, after pressure from former execs and public. How do you feel about PayPal's policy?
Will disconnect whatever is linked to my account and delete it soon. Venmo, too. Paying online with a credit (not debit) card is not too bad - if there's a fraudulent charge, it's the bank's money, not yours, and they'll have to go after the scammers if they want to, you'll get reimbursed.
That's what I initially thought as well. But what if the bank charges back to you and keeps dinking your credit score till you pay up? Edit: nvm I re-read it, yeah just entering cc info looks a whole lot better now 😅
Working for pp in Europe and this is very much a US story (really stupid mistake for sure) but find it funny how Americans are up in arms because someone has tried to make a stand on miss-information. It’s a lesson to any platform/political party etc who was thinking of tackling it. So the future is grim (Again not justifying it - we heard about it just wasn’t a big deal on other side of Atlantic)
Who decides what is disinformation. Going against the grain is sometimes accurate.
@plki exactly..
27% sleepwalking
Shows how intelligent blinders really are lol 🤦♂️
PayPal always been weird but you gotta keep an account by default. Just can’t base your business off of it.
Yeah, probably link a low balance account to be safe? Still surprising that businesses that support PayPal as a payment method and the govt didn't even bother about a private company trying to implement such a policy.