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Date:         Fri, 11 Feb 2005 00:19:36 EST
Reply-To:     THX0001@AOL.COM
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         George Goff <THX0001@AOL.COM>
Subject:      Re: What would you do?
Comments: To: chuckphoto@EARTHLINK.NET
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"

In a message dated 2/10/05 1:04:37 PM, chuckphoto@EARTHLINK.NET writes:

<< Would you purchase from an individual that:

Does not accept Pay-pal, credit cards, or personal checks.... ... and...will only accepts money orders..... >>

By far the worst way to submit payment to an unknown is by way of a personal check. The individual might be in business solely to harvest your all important bank account number.

In my experience, PayPal is fine as long as you do not have any problems with the execution of the transaction, but to look to PayPal for assistance is like pissing in the wind. While I won't mention any names here, a list parts dealer recently told me that his bank account number had been gleaned from PayPal creating such a fiscal morass that it has taken him weeks to straighten it out and cost him more than a little lost revenue.

For at-distance transactions with private individuals (eBay, etc.) I think the best vehicle for the payment is a USPS money order, not just any money order, a USPS money order. Postal inspectors really do take mail fraud seriously and they have to do something to while away their time. Also, the parties on both ends of the transaction are protected. In the worst case, should the deal get queered you will get your money back minus a very reasonable processing fee of a couple bucks.

Money order anecdotes:

My Sweetheart and I wanted to surprise our son with a Batboy T-shirt. That's the Batboy who was found living in a cave in West Virginia and who was featured on the cover of Weekly World News at the checkout counter of your friendly neighborhood supermarket, not the prepubescent Batman. Since the tabloid did not take Am Ex, we dutifully sent off a money order, purchased at a convenience store, in the amount of $19.99. After weeks of waiting, we learned that the Batboy publishing house was in the same building in Florida as the weekly rag which had suffered an anthrax scare and that our order was lost. When we went to file a claim, the issuer wanted a $15 filing fee -- we didn't even bother to go through the process. Lesson learned.

My son (again, my son) sent away for an obscure, industrial rock CD collection, real "classic" stuff. The merchant accepted no charge cards, so the tab of about $80 was paid with a USPS money order. After more than a few weeks and after leaving several messages on an answering machine in North Jersey which had a thick Russian accent, my wife filed a claim with the Post Office. She had to fill out a one page form and pay a fee of a couple of bucks. The day the claim check arrived so did the original money order from the guy to whom we had sent it.

George


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