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Chinese Web Sites or on Facebook easy to spot so buyer beware.
1. No return address on the returns policy............thats because the site will look as if its in your country (where they despatch goods from) BUT they will ask for returns to go back to China (returns depot) at a shipping cost nearly always more than the item is worth.
2. No contact telephone number............if you click on contact the most you will get is webmail or an email address.
3. No company address information.
4. Great looking items at bargain prices that turn out to be tat.
How do I open a dispute with a seller when a purchase goes wrong?
You can open a dispute in the Resolution Centre of your PayPal account within 180 days of payment if:
•You don’t receive the item
•You receive an item but it’s significantly different than the description on eBay or on the seller’s website
By opening a dispute, you can communicate directly with your seller to work out a problem transaction.
If you reach an agreement with the seller you can close the dispute. If you're still not happy with the result, you can escalate the dispute into a claim. We'll review the claim and decide on reimbursement.
These steps apply to Personal accounts. If you have a Business account, please log in to see the steps that apply to you.
To open a dispute:
1.Log in to your PayPal account.
2. Click on the transaction and use the resolve a problem option at the bottom of that details page.
Note:
•Generally buyers must wait at least 7 days from the date of payment to escalate a dispute for an item not received
•Where an item has not been received, please ensure you have given the seller enough time before opening a dispute
https://www.paypal.com/webapps/mpp/first-dispute
DO NOT CLOSE THE DISPUTE UNTIL YOU HAVE A CLEARED REFUND OR YOUR ITEM WHATEVER THE SELLER SAYS. ALSO DON'T FORGET TO ESCALATE THE DISPUTE TO A CLAIM WITHIN 20 DAYS IF THE SELLER DOES NOT REFUND.
If that does not work then if you funded your paypal payment via a card then contact your card issuer and see if they will do a chargeback for you.
Advice is voluntary.
Kudos / Solution appreciated.
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Chinese Web Sites or on Facebook easy to spot so buyer beware.
1. No return address on the returns policy............thats because the site will look as if its in your country (where they despatch goods from) BUT they will ask for returns to go back to China (returns depot) at a shipping cost nearly always more than the item is worth.
2. No contact telephone number............if you click on contact the most you will get is webmail or an email address.
3. No company address information.
4. Great looking items at bargain prices that turn out to be tat.
How do I open a dispute with a seller when a purchase goes wrong?
You can open a dispute in the Resolution Centre of your PayPal account within 180 days of payment if:
•You don’t receive the item
•You receive an item but it’s significantly different than the description on eBay or on the seller’s website
By opening a dispute, you can communicate directly with your seller to work out a problem transaction.
If you reach an agreement with the seller you can close the dispute. If you're still not happy with the result, you can escalate the dispute into a claim. We'll review the claim and decide on reimbursement.
These steps apply to Personal accounts. If you have a Business account, please log in to see the steps that apply to you.
To open a dispute:
1.Log in to your PayPal account.
2. Click on the transaction and use the resolve a problem option at the bottom of that details page.
Note:
•Generally buyers must wait at least 7 days from the date of payment to escalate a dispute for an item not received
•Where an item has not been received, please ensure you have given the seller enough time before opening a dispute
https://www.paypal.com/webapps/mpp/first-dispute
DO NOT CLOSE THE DISPUTE UNTIL YOU HAVE A CLEARED REFUND OR YOUR ITEM WHATEVER THE SELLER SAYS. ALSO DON'T FORGET TO ESCALATE THE DISPUTE TO A CLAIM WITHIN 20 DAYS IF THE SELLER DOES NOT REFUND.
If that does not work then if you funded your paypal payment via a card then contact your card issuer and see if they will do a chargeback for you.
Advice is voluntary.
Kudos / Solution appreciated.
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Yes. Many names. One website. Multiple emails. PayPal email different from site email. Customer Relations email different too. All ads coming from FB, and other Social Media. Bought a $39.95 plus $8 postage “Robot Cleaner wth self cleaning base”. Received crap toy junk. Complained to PayPal. Seller offered $20 back. Basically they still make $27 per item if people accept it when they don’t want the hassle. I refused. So back to PayPal. Meanwhile they reply to say that they have “cancelled my order and that I deal with PayPal”.
Ok. So shall I wait for PayPal’s response or should I do a charge a with American Express since it was paid with this via PayPal. I read somewhere on this forum thatI should wait for PayPal before doing a chargeback. Seller has not requested item back. But I can send it off quite cheaply.. certified mail with signature and tracking is available thru Us.
Remember if anything seems to good to be true, chances are it is!
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The items purchased were paid from a bank account. I don't really think that the bank will be of much use in this this situation.
Hey I have an Idea. PayPal should request an actual digital photo of the item(s) sent along with a packing list from the seller. The buyer can video the opening of the package film the packing list and the item(s) being removed form the package. This way if the item being sent doesn't match what is received by the buyer, PayPal can refund the purchase price and shipping charges back to the buyer and ask the shipper for the cost of returning the goods. this would go a long way to reducing the ability of an dishonorable seller from reaping rewards for unethical practices. How about this PayPal.
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AS I see it: PayPal does not want to provide protection to the buyer in these bait and switch scams. the way things are set up allow the perpetrator of the scam to operate as PayPal policies enable this scam to happen and be concluded to t final ends where the scammer gets away with it. Making it profitable for the scammer and PayPal. I think PayPal would want to protect the main reason they are in operation, without buyers there is no need for PayPal.
Just a few tweaks to how PayPal allows sellers to interact with buyer would solve all these issues. Real reputable sellers could handle what is being asked of them and scammers would loose money and drop out. PayPal just needs to want to provide the protection for the buyer.
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The solution isn't helpful for people post being scammed. I mentioned this discussion thread to PayPal during my dispute and they just replied that they screen all of their businesses business plans and have faith in all companies who use PayPal etc etc.... of course a company isn't going to submit a business plan saying they plan to scam people.
PayPal are flat out just saying the only option is to pay the high postage costs to return the item.
They are not actually wanting to fix the problem, just deal with us when we complain like this as they make too much from the merchant fees.
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Lol just wrote to PayPal in regards to my dispute, saying people are either out the cost of shipping or just have no option but to close the case when shipping is too expensive. PayPal replied with instructions on how to close my dispute. Great customer service there.
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Don't do a chargeback against paypal. They will likely raise holy hellfire with your account for doing so, and lets be real, we need paypal.
Next up, paypal, at least here in the states, has a shipping reimbursement you can get paid for if you sign-up. I would imagine googling shipping reimbursement would get you somewhere.
The thing I ran into is the shipping reimbursement is up to 30 bucks, but it would be 45 to ship it back. So my net 'recovery' would be 7 dollars. I'm mad, but ultimately, ok. Just a little wiser.
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