Thought we were on about ebay being able to collect money owed from you or your account, regardless of you linking your bank account to your pp.
And surely it will be a less complicated system if two companies are not involved in trying to resolve a case, as was often the case ebay and pp used to try to shift the blame from one to the other. There is always civil court and ebay will always provide all evidence for you if you have genuinely been the victim of a fraud. They can not be expected to resolve an issue when they only have the word of both parties.
We are, it's just that a private corporations definition of "owed" can often deviate, legally and ethically, from the actual definition of the same. You're an honest man and you think like one, I can tell. Unfortunately, not everyone shares your scruples.
With a linked account, they take the money and you then have to pay to fight and have it returned, which is much harder than them wanting the money and you simply refusing to acknowledge the debt, which will often forcibly escalate the issue to someone who will actually look at it in detail and decide you didn't owe the money afterall.
eBay are disposing of the middleman and becoming the payment processor themselves, whilst I believe, demanding unlimited access to a linked account of some form. This means they can summarily decide on say, an eBay dispute, which could end up costing the seller money, even if they have acted in good faith at all times.
As I said in my last post, I think if you're faced with unfair invoices, you need to be in a position of not even acknowledging the "debt", rather than be looking at recovery through the courts as your first recourse. You're right in that a civil court would determine an outcome, but in the mean time, if you've had ebay debit your account, you're out of pocket and it could be damaging, for reasons I will go into below.
That was the reason for my having an unlinked paypal account and also the reason I won't sign up to ebays new agreement.
Imagine a situation where eBay summarily decided against you and decided to refund a fraudulent buyer regardless of your evidence, which has happened to me and
many others. What would happen to your conduct record with your bank? Would your credit rating be affected? Mortgage application? Go overdrawn and incurr fees? If I hadn't had the protections I put in place, at one point, I'd have been out of pocket for £2,000 or so in cash and a laptop of the same value, for an indeterminate period, completely at the mercy of the payment provider and without any FCA protection.
I am not going to detail how the buyer performed the fraud on a public forum, but it was fraud and it was organised. Paypal refused to accept the evidence I offered and said I had to refund the buyer. I rightly refused. I had acted in good faith and the buyer was fraudulent. Worse still, further research showed they had done it before.
Anyhow, Paypal took me to the limit of the card attached to Paypal and started chasing for the rest. I let them. I let it go until they escalated it to their debt recovery team and I got a name, at which point I wrote a letter back, copying in the CEO, refusing to acknowledge the debt, detailed the circumstances and provided evidence, also threatening to sue. Within two weeks they had relented, I was refunded the charges and compensated the final value fee plus £100 goodwill gesture. They would have had no incentive to deal with the case so quickly and efficiently had they been in posession of my money throughout.
I have absolutely no reason to think ebay acting as arbiter would be any different than paypal, for a number of reasons, chiefly because their entire marketing campaign might as well have a flag stating "rights for buyers", but I think I've written more than enough to bore the socks off anyone reading so I'll shut up