tomscy2000
Headphoneus Supremus
Hey, at least it's good for the global economy?
Hey, at least it's good for the global economy?
As long as you only spend the content of your wallet, rather than get into debt "American style."
PayPal really encourages this. Each time I use their service, they force me to say no, again and again and again, to their "bill me later" scheme. There are two options when you pay: "pay now" or "bill me later." But if you select "pay now," you get a pop-up telling you that, really, you should use "bill me later" instead.
They really push it, to a point that should be illegal: You can offer a service; you shouldn't be allowed to insist that people use it. Not a service that leads to people getting into debt, when it's already an endemic problem in the States.
Er, did I go into a tangent?
Btw, I've never had Paypal offer me the 'Bill me later' option. Is that only when you have a credit card attached to it?
No, I only have debit cards (one per country I've lived in). Like you, I don't spend money I don't have. But PayPal has access to my bank account. >_<
Strange... I've only got a debit as well. PayPal has access to my bank account too... right now they're asking for me to provide them with ID to verify my account identity. Why do they need that now?! Violation of privacy if you ask me. This whole world is turning more into Big Brother day by day...
If you still believe Google care about their customers, take a look at their recently-introduced changes to Android Marketplace. They're following Apple in demanding full rights to control content on users' devices (eg remotely deleting whatever the hell they like, without user consent). Then there's the alleged data-mining on various platforms (inc Mac OSX's Safari browser). Don't kid yourself that Google care more about end-users than they do about themselves
Some companies have kept great customer service even after they became big (e.g. Amazon). Others (eBay, and PayPal when they bought it) completely stopped any real pretense at caring as soon as they cornered the market. I used to be able to use PayPal in any country in the world; for years, I had registered addresses is several countries (I was born in France, studied in the States, now work in Taiwan, and have friends and family all over the globe). Then PayPal suddenly grayed out those addresses and, nowadays, only let you use their service in the same country you've opened your account ... unless you buy through their parent company, eBay.
(I like the convenience of PayPal too, Joe, but I do hope that some worthy competitor comes that show more care for their customers. Maybe Google!)
If you still believe Google care about their customers, take a look at their recently-introduced changes to Android Marketplace. They're following Apple in demanding full rights to control content on users' devices (eg remotely deleting whatever the hell they like, without user consent). Then there's the alleged data-mining on various platforms (inc Mac OSX's Safari browser). Don't kid yourself that Google care more about end-users than they do about themselves
BUT... we are digressing here.
Having chatted with Grzegorz at length, it's very evident that he really DOES care about his customers.
I agree completely. I'll never own a credit card for the same reason. Every purchase I make is with my own money and only when I have a surplus of expendable income already in my bank account.
I also don't go out drinking or clubbing (clubbing my hearing more like, amirite?) nor waste money on things I don't need or want so that I can afford things that I do want (or convince myself I need).
Btw, I've never had Paypal offer me the 'Bill me later' option. Is that only when you have a credit card attached to it?
[Off Topic, sorry]
You have to have established credit for them to trust you with bill me later. They review your credit history and make a decision based on that. You shouldn't let credit scare you. Just control yourself as you are now. Treat those credit cards just as a means to build your credit and use that same mentality you are using (living within your means). Use the credit card to pay stuff off that you would pay off anyways with your bank account. You generally have a 20+ day grace period before any interest accrues and pay the balances off before you get charged interest. This will build your credit which is very important in this day and age. You can miss good job opportunities and have a hard time renting a home due to not having established credit. Also for future purchases such as a home or car; you'll end up paying a lot more in interest due to your credit rating. Just my 2 cents .
I never had any debt, nor did I ever buy anything on credit. So I don't have an established credit line, as you say, and that makes me less reliable than people who bought stuff with money they didn't have. That's friggin' ridiculous.
As for PayPal, they really try to force they BillMeLater program down my throat.