When is PayPal payment coming to Linode?
45 Replies
-Chris
–Ray
@caker:
Currently, there are no plans to add PayPal as a method of payment for Linode.com.
Translation: When hell freezes over.
@pclissold:
Translation: When hell freezes over.
Good!
Paypal is the biggest scam ever.
It acts like a bank, it works like a bank, it thinks it can charge fees that would make a bank blush, but it has NO REGULATION WHAT SO EVER.
I avoid Paypal like the bad rash it is.
@vonskippy:
@pclissold:Translation: When hell freezes over.
Good!Paypal is the biggest scam ever.
It acts like a bank, it works like a bank, it thinks it can charge fees that would make a bank blush, but it has NO REGULATION WHAT SO EVER.
Regulation is morally indefensible…
Either they're committing acts that are illegal for anyone, in which case existing laws and enforcement mechanisms are sufficient; or they're not, in which case there's no reason to treat them separately because they're morally no different from anyone else.
@kmweber:
Either they're committing acts that are illegal for anyone, in which case existing laws and enforcement mechanisms are sufficient; or they're not, in which case there's no reason to treat them separately because they're morally no different from anyone else.
Last I checked - the LEGAL system uses "laws" not "morals".
So when Paypal arbitrarily freezes your account - and the legal system can do NOTHING because they're not a bank - let me know how that moral argument works for you.
Neither him or MLK Jr had a firm grip on reality - so whats your point?
@BarkerJr:
Martin Luther King Jr said that immoral laws are no laws at all and everyone has the moral responsibility to disobey them. So, he says that laws are morals.
This strongly relates to Linode and PayPal since you are tripping.
"Look, the keyboard is breathing!"
James
@hoopycat:
Why are we speaking German? A mime cries softly as he cradles a young electronic funds transfer. Your grandfather stares at you as the EFT falls apart into debits. You look down only to see me with MasterCard logos for eyes, I am singing the song that gives birth to the universe.
clicks fingers
@hoopycat:
Why are we speaking German? A mime cries softly as he cradles a young electronic funds transfer. Your grandfather stares at you as the EFT falls apart into debits. You look down only to see me with MasterCard logos for eyes, I am singing the song that gives birth to the universe.
You are indeed, hoopy.
I am sure there are pretty specific reasons why Linode does not use Paypal, as there are many unwanted issues that arise for businesses using Paypal from Paypal.
Linode has good reason not to touch them. Its just that we're not as smart as Linode, and we'll be trying it.
Maybe this will stop people from asking Caker: I see you don't take Paypal, will you take Paypal?
Hopefully his markup will make it worth the risk for him
@sblantipodi:
paypal want to many dollars, I pay 3.4% on every transactions done with customers outside my country, this is quite un-acceptable for me and I think that is the same for linode team.
This is pretty similar to the fees you'll pay for VISA/Mastercard/etc. PayPal's fees are similar to standard credit card fees, unless you're really big and can avoid getting ripped off by the payment processor.
@Guspaz:
This is pretty similar to the fees you'll pay for VISA/Mastercard/etc. PayPal's fees are similar to standard credit card fees, unless you're really big and can avoid getting ripped off by the payment processor.
This isn't correct, my VISA as like as many other credit card have no fees when receiving payments.
@sblantipodi:
@Guspaz:This is pretty similar to the fees you'll pay for VISA/Mastercard/etc. PayPal's fees are similar to standard credit card fees, unless you're really big and can avoid getting ripped off by the payment processor.
This isn't correct, my VISA as like as many other credit card have no fees when receiving payments.
No, guspaz is 100% correct. You (the merchant) do pay when you (the merchant) makes a credit card transaction, for every single transaction. Every one. Every swipe, costs money, every dollar of the transaction costs money. The type of card matters too. If you really want to screw over a retailer use your "rewards" Visa or Mastercard. Almost everyone of them will be paying over 3% for the transaction (plus a swipe fee). Yes $3+ for every $100 is taken right out of their pocket on a transaction like that.
Though, most brick-n-mortar stores typically pay much lower fees than what PayPal charges. However, accepting credit cards via a website typically leads to higher rates being charged, like what PayPal charges….
Visa, Mastercard, AMEX, Discover, etc all charge the merchant a processing fee. This is how they make the majority of their money. Then they also charge the customer interest off of any unpaid balances.
If you want to do your local merchant a favor pay with cash or check. You'll save them $10,000s (depending on their business) per year.
Oh and just so you know, those places like restaurants, hair stylists, espresso stands, etc who have tip lines on the credit card receipt pay even a higher rate as that's instantly a riskier transaction. Riskier still are those who are phone order type businesses.
I know this because I am a merchant and I accept credit cards and I read my agreements and statements from the credit card processing company.
It is by far, one of the most confusing and convoluted systems that I've ever seen. There is no way for the customer to know this information without being informed and there is no way for a merchant to even look at a card and know how much they'll be charged. Whether that's a qualifying card (lowest/best rate), a mid-qualifying card (higher rate), or a non-qualifying card (highest rate charged, typically ~3.5%).
My answer is that I make about 500 transaction a month,
no fees for that with my credit card, come here in Italy and
see the italian quality
The shop/merchant is charged quite large fees by the credit card company when you pay there.
@rsk:
Won't feed the troll anymore.
Go on – just one more bite -- he's so funny.
The credit card companies also have stipulations in their contracts that merchants may not upcharge for credit card usage. I.e., they may not charge an extra 3% for using a credit card. So the shops just raise their prices, so in the end it's the consumers who are hurt by higher prices – about 3% higher (go figure).
So it's like a tax on all transactions, albeit one that is paid to the credit card companies. Nope, you don't get roads from this tax. It's even worse for rewards cards: the cash buyers end up subsidizing free airfare for the credit card users. Oh, and people with high rewards cards tend to be more wealthy. Cash buyers tend to be the poorest. Talk about regressivity.
MasterCard and Visa are being sued in a big class action by merchants for the provisions that do not allow them to add a surcharge for credit card processing. Fat chance. I have heard that Australia outlawed such provisions, and that after merchants started surcharging for credit card usage, credit card use dropped.
@hoopycat:
Why are we speaking German? A mime cries softly as he cradles a young electronic funds transfer. Your grandfather stares at you as the EFT falls apart into debits. You look down only to see me with MasterCard logos for eyes, I am singing the song that gives birth to the universe.
Well, actually my grandfather is blind. But the rest of it is accurate.
James
Seriously, it's super easy to get a prepaid Visa or MasterCard these days. You can even get them online. Buy one, deposit the whole amount into your Linode account (yes you can do that), and throw the card away.
@jonny5alive:
Why throw it away?
Oh, I was talking about non-rechargeable cards they sell at grocery stores and the like.
@Guspaz:
So prepay a year using a prepaid card, or use a linode reseller who supports paypal.
I'd rather just pay directly with PayPal thanks.
I host community-driven sites that take donations to survive. I take a hit when I get donations by paypal, and I take a hit when I send it to my bank account. Rather take out the 2nd hit.
@BarkerJr:
Here's a -1 for the Paypal: a company that hates freedom.
-1 more. Paypal can…ya know…shove it…
-1.
@BarkerJr:
Here's a -1 for the Paypal: a company that hates freedom.
Or perhaps a company that loves the freedom to run their company in a bunch of financial regulatory loopholes?