You dont get it. That payment (paypal) can side with the buyer. Buyer claims you sent the product unloaded....how can you prove it wasnt? You therefore owe back the money or if they are quick enough the payment wont even be cleared before you are even beat. Its has happened in the past and will happen in the future. Risk/reward, but you clearly arent understanding which is fine.
Edit: and if you reply with you will wait until the "grace period" is over before shipment, i dont think you will find too many buyers to pay you and wait more than 180 days to recieve their coin
Hi Wheelz, I'm not arguing here. I still think a few here are still missing my point.
I've bought Cas coins off eBay. The coin was not sent until my payment was received by the seller, this means it cleared paypal or the credit card company. And the seller had full control of the paid funds when they sent the purchased coin to the me. If the seller was worried about a scam they can also time stamp screenshot two separate, independent sources that show the coin was funded at the time of sale and the integrity of the hologram at the time of shipment.
What can paypal or eBay due to require the seller repay the money that's they've already received from the buyer? Ebay/Paypal can block the seller's account. Anything worse than that? I don't think so.
If a seller of a Casacius coin can get a few thousand dollars more by selling on eBay that seller shouldn't let the potential of scam by the buyer deter them. The worse that can happen to the seller is getting a negative review or a blocked ebay/paypal account. No one here has offered knowledge of any more serious consequence and "it's happened in the past" doesn't actually explain what happened in the past or (more importantly) what the consequence was.
I just did some searching and the only thing I found on Paypal's website that might provide risk to the seller is their right to withhold an initial payment for 21 days (
https://www.paypal.com/us/selfhelp/article/why-is-my-payment-being-held-for-21-days-faq3236). Two (of a few) reasons for withholding payment are if the account is new or if the payment differs from your account trend (which would likely be the case with a Cas coin.)
If a seller chooses not to accept PayPal and requires payment receipt before sending the coin I believe they can eliminate all risk of having to refund someone money due to a scam. Buyer's benefit more from paying with a credit card, they get better purchase protection and probably some points or something.
There's nothing I found at PayPal's site that indicates they can force a refund request. I'm surprised so many in this group would feel required to give a refund when they know they're being scammed by a buyer!