What.cd Paypal Frozen?

misterdude123

New member
It has nothing to do with traders. Normal people will want their money back if they donate to a cause and then get banned from it days later. I think if a tracker bans someone who has donated within the last two weeks they should refund the donation.

Noone donates and gets banned randomly a week later. The people who are getting banned are cheaters who think donating makes them immune to the rules, traders who want something else to use for barter, and sellers trying to turn a profit off their donation.

Even if a tracker does issue a refund every time someone who donated gets banned and complains, paypal can still arbitrarily lock the account and put it under "investigation" for a few months after a few complaints.
 
noticed today when I clicked on what.cd's donation page I got this

Unfortunately, the service we used for donations has decided to freeze our main account, and we will no longer be processing our donations through them. Please bear with us while we work out a permanent solution.

noticed this has been happening to more then a few trackers as of late?...if there anything these sites can really do to stop people from donating and then trying debate the charge?

PPS-Cartoon1.gif
 
Ok my bad guys i havent donated at waffles if you want me to be honest i just didnt see anywhere in the rules or FAQ that you got invites upon donating so i didnt think thats how it was(maybe i missed it idk)

Either way i still oppose the idea that users(not traders/sellers/or anyone else specifically) would participate in this bull$#!%... ok if you donate and then get banned within a certain period you should have the right to request your money back if it is unjustified but how often does that happen? Seriously guys this exact problem has threatened the very existence of several trackers in the past few months and i cannot see why ppl continue to do this. What happens when it actually takes down one of the trackers? how many ppl here would feel the effects of losing what.cd? i feel like that would be a huge lose to the BT community, and for what, a couple of dollars or invites you just couldnt live without? this is ridiculous... i cant even put how this makes me feel into words... i guess a miture of pity, disgust, and general embarassment to be in any way involved with the kind of people who would actually go through the effort to do this...

@Idol - i kind of understood the feelings you described in the beginning of your irony giveaway but now i fully understand what you mean... this is pitiful
I thought hadnt been around the BT world long enough to be disgusted with it already but unfortunately that doesnt seem to be the case...
 
It has nothing to do with traders. Normal people will want their money back if they donate to a cause and then get banned from it days later. I think if a tracker bans someone who has donated within the last two weeks they should refund the donation.
You really are an idiot aren't you :lol: I know you love leaping to the defense of traders, but in this case you're simply wrong.

I can tell you first hand that the number of returned paypal claims from newly banned members is miniscule compared to the number of claims from traders and sellers. Note that the former demographic is generally filled with traders and sellers, since they get caught and banned, and that's generally why they try and claim their money back. It's fairly rare to get a claim from an innocent member, especially since generally they will only be banned for ratio or inactivity, neither of which tend towards donations (unless you donate for ratio credit in which case that'd prevent your ratio ban).

Quite simply put, this is by far one of the greatest tangible problems with invite traders and sellers. Generally this means you should limit invites for donations, as many sites do by simply giving you invites on the first donation or not releasing invites for donations at all. It's a fine line between coming up with tangible benefits that donors want and protecting the security of the site.
 
It's a fine line between coming up with tangible benefits that donors want and protecting the security of the site.

I was actually looking for a way to say just that, well said ca_aok. Unfortunately i feel like the quality of your statements and even the logic behind arguments are irrelevant when dealing with certain members(not mentioning any names :whistling ) here... to me it feels similar to dealing with radical politicians(both far left and right) and/or illogical religious freaks(and no this doesnt mean every religious person but we all know ppl who take it to far and dont think for themselves) in that no matter what you say or how stupid they may look in their arguement they will never consider re-evaluating their position... Call it arrogance, ignorance, closed-mindedness or whatever you choose but in any circumstance it makes you look like an idiot(again not directed at anyone in particular :whistling )
 
SeX said:
Donations Closed
Donations are temporarily down, they will be back soon.

Seems SeX may have a similar issue.



Anyways, PayPal (PeePee or PP) seems to be freezing a lot of accounts, which have a lot of e-cash stored in them. ScT supposedly made $100000+ dollars (with just 20000~ members, over 4 years), whilst What has 5 times as many members, and been around for 3 years... they must've had a lot of money in that account - though I don't wish to speculate.

So this got me thinking; in UK it's illegal to take money out of circulation... ie damaging coins, or burning notes. I know the majority of a country's currency is simply non existent... it might be "digitally" held or is simply traded around until required. However, PeePee freezing these accounts means that a lot of money is no longer usable, and is kept frozen in the banned account... it's there, but can't be accessed. Largely, I doubt this has any effect on the economy... but is this not illegal for PP to do?
 
Nah, banks and credit cards can freeze assets if they find suspicious activity on the accounts. Legally they could probably force PP to give them the money if they told them what was going on, but that would of course lead to legal problems for the torrent site itself.
 
I think if a tracker bans someone who has donated within the last two weeks they should refund the donation.

Yeah they really should, or for however long that transaction stays in the donors paypal history. Sites losing funds is all too common.

Or to be completely straight, I don't think they should not ban trader donors at all. If your site is gonna get taken down from legal action, it's gonna get taken down. Hunting traders will do absolutely nothing in the laws change, the only important thing you can do is host in a friendly country and hope no ruling that goes badly sets a precedent against you. It's kinda silly how much time the volunteer staff must spend on something so trivial. If they meet the ratio requirements, they won't harm your tracker. If they do not, then go ahead, refund them and after refunding them ban them.
 
Neglecting the fact that frequent refunds also looks suspicious to the paypal folks, I'm not seeing how a donation should be refundable. Might want to look up "donation" in a dictionary. No one forced you to send the money in the first place, if that was the case (like if the site charged everyone $10 to sign up), that should be refundable. A donation is freely given from one person to another. Let's see you donate to a charity and then ask for a refund a few weeks later because you don't like what they're doing.

TrueSounds said:
Or to be completely straight, I don't think they should not ban trader donors at all. If your site is gonna get taken down from legal action, it's gonna get taken down. Hunting traders will do absolutely nothing in the laws change, the only important thing you can do is host in a friendly country and hope no ruling that goes badly sets a precedent against you. It's kinda silly how much time the volunteer staff must spend on something so trivial. If they meet the ratio requirements, they won't harm your tracker. If they do not, then go ahead, refund them and after refunding them ban them.
It's their choice to trade/sell, just as it's the staff's choice on whether or not to hunt them. It's all a matter of choices, and if you make the wrong ones, it's a matter of suffering the consequences. Don't QQ to me when you donate for invites, get banned for selling them on an auction site, and then try to claim your money back. You spent the money, you received the bonus. You misused your account, you got banned. Two separate but linked instances.
 
are invites even a donation benefit at what.cd? i know they arents at waffles

@HDBITs - while i agree offering invites as a donation benefit isnt exactly right imo as it is kind of like them selling useable invites which if anyone did personally we would all consider wrong i do have to add that if the trader/seller or whatever wants the invites than donating the 10 euros or whatever isnt that bad... if you cant afford it dont donate but its just wrong to go contest it and get their money back after theyve already gotten the invites/ul credit/vip status or whatever... doing this puts the tracker in danger and i think it will eventually lead to a sight many of us enjoy(i dont have any idea which one i just feel as if its gonna happen) being shut down... i think even you could agree that you wouldnt want that couldnt you?
 
It's not illogical to want your money back if you get banned. We're not talking about donating to an AIDS kids charity here, there is not really any moral weight involved in reclaiming your money, which you seem to be implying there is.

Trackers should give back money before banning as a good business model and a safe precaution. Why would anyone donate to a tracker if there is a big chance they money is gonna be frozen and lost. It's pretty greedy and irrational not to refund a 'donation' in my eyes.


It's their choice to trade/sell, just as it's the staff's choice on whether or not to hunt them. It's all a matter of choices, and if you make the wrong ones, it's a matter of suffering the consequences. Don't QQ to me when you donate for invites, get banned for selling them on an auction site, and then try to claim your money back. You spent the money, you received the bonus. You misused your account, you got banned. Two separate but linked instances.

Exactly, and its a trackers choice not to refund before banning. I don't even feel bad for trackers that get their funds frozen because of this. It was their choice, they shouldn't QQ to their users for making the wrong one.
 
Right, because it's not greedy and irrational to expect to profit off something you were explicitly told would get you banned, and then whine about it afterward. Of course if we didn't have people selling invites, we wouldn't have to worry so much about accounts being frozen, but that's a chicken and egg scenario right there. And as I already stated, frequently refunding funds looks just as suspicious as frequent claims against the account.

TrueSounds said:
Exactly, and its a trackers choice not to refund before banning. I don't even feel bad for trackers that get their funds frozen because of this. It was their choice, they shouldn't QQ to their users for making the wrong one.
Enjoy watching your trackers go down the drain then, as I'm not aware of any of them that implement this policy (or it's certainly not made public if so).
 
Pretty much.

And people wonder why trackers hate traders so much..

It has nothing to do with traders. Normal people will want their money back if they donate to a cause and then get banned from it days later. I think if a tracker bans someone who has donated within the last two weeks they should refund the donation.
 
Enjoy watching legit donors continue to needlessly waste money, as I'm not aware of any of them that implement this policy (or it's certainly not made public if so).

correction.

PS I'm not justifying or contemplating ethics behind trading. If you ask me, trading is more of a hassle than giveaways considering the opportunity costs of the anti-trade climate, ie the lengths staff go to protect against it. You are a fool to be trading or doing random public giveaways in the first place, but that has nothing to do with trackers taking needless risks with their money by being overly stingy.
 
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