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ok heres the deal i got a fraud email from paypal abt my payment being recieved. I sent out items worth $1500 and now i m screwed. The buyer claims paypal made a mistake. help what do i do??

2007-03-26 13:34:37 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Credit

4 answers

So you got an email that said that the payment was there but it actually wasn't? The buyer claims that paypal made a mistake, meaning that they mistakenly told you it was paid but it wasn't?

So then, what does the buyer intend to do about it, they still haven't paid it. Try to deal directly with the buyer first, they should be attempting to make the payment and if it hasn't gone through they should figure out how to make it go through. Save (and print out) the emails that said you were paid, and your recent paypal activity that says you haven't. Those can be used later to prove or disprove allegations.

If the buyer makes no attempt to make the payment go through, I'd assume that they originated the fake payment email (who else would send you that information in that exact amount) and go through eBay's Safe Harbor to see what they suggest you do.

2007-03-26 14:10:38 · answer #1 · answered by calliope320 4 · 1 0

I had a similar problem--I bought something and paid for it, and the seller never sent it and made up some excuse to keep my money. He said something went wrong with PayPal and he didn't get my payment. But my account had been charged! I filed a complaint with eBay and got my money back.

This page tells you what to do:

http://pages.ebay.com/help/tp/isgw-fraud-receiving-payments.html

Good luck!

2007-03-26 14:12:32 · answer #2 · answered by gobanana516 4 · 0 0

there is not any such element as information superhighway fraud.there's a element called information superhighway stupid.It seems such as you probably did not deliver any funds. you're between the fortunate human beings not dropping any funds. human beings getting cheated on the information superhighway is a lot greater than the figures teach. Sending credit card preparation over the information superhighway is the stupidest element each and every person would desire to do. do not hear to those that communicate approximately how risk-free that's. there is not any one hundred% risk-free practices on the information superhighway. the reality that Microsoft has been hacked a number of cases would desire to teach how risk-free that's. the mummy of the information superhighway has no risk-free guards which would be unable to be broken. And the guy who did the main harm grew to become into sixteen years old. LOL

2016-11-23 17:57:10 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You need to describe this a little bit better so we can help you. What exactly happened?

2007-03-26 13:45:34 · answer #4 · answered by becky m 4 · 0 0

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