Sorry Ron, I do this on a regular basis. I sell a lot on eBay, and I let incoming money lay in my paypal account for a few days, and transfer it to my Bank account in say $50 or $100 chunks. That might leave, say $17.68 in my account. If after winning an auction, I click on the pay button, that $17.68 goes first and the balance of what I owe comes from my bank account. It could come from my credit card, which I have on file with them, but I prefer to pay up front and not put it on my card. I keep very little in that bank account, I just make sure there is enough to cover my winning bids. I have heard stories of them "reclaiming" funds, but never met anyone it happened to. But, by all means, protect yourself as you see fit. Better safe than sorry. Ray > From: Ron Waters <ronbo97@xxxxxxxxxxx> > Reply-To: Ron Waters <ronbo97@xxxxxxxxxxx> > Date: Sat, 27 Sep 2003 17:26:58 -0400 > To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: [FWDLK] Possible scam > >> Of course it gives them the right to withdraw. That's the idea. >> You get funds in your paypal account and transfer them to your bank > account. >> If you pay with paypal, they take the money fromn your paypal account > first, >> and when that's used up, they withdraw from your bank account OR credit > card >> whichever you choose. > > Although I don't have the paypal 'rules' in front of me, I doubt that this > is the case . If you buy something and pay using paypal, the first thing > the application would do is check your account for sufficient funds. If > there's enough $$$, then it will allow the transaction to go thru. If not, > then it denies the transaction and prompts you to add more funds to the > account. IMHO, the only time paypal would transfer funds from your bank > account is when you authorize them to add money to your paypal account. > > Can somebody prove me wrong about this ??? > > Ron > > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > Over 25,000 pages of archived Forward Look information can be easily searched > at > http://www.forwardlook.net/search.htm Powered by Google! > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Over 25,000 pages of archived Forward Look information can be easily searched at http://www.forwardlook.net/search.htm Powered by Google!
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