Ever get that pesky sensation when you are sitting there wondering, "Did this guy just scam me?" That happened to a friend of mine who owns a small VPS web hosting company. And boy is it more than you can shake a stick at.
You won’t believe what happened to him, a buyer purchased VPS/Server and after few days, he submitted a dispute in Paypal for refund.
This is how they do it:
Here's the catch: web hosting is an intangible product, not a tangible one. That is:
You won’t believe what happened to him, a buyer purchased VPS/Server and after few days, he submitted a dispute in Paypal for refund.
How Buyers Are Taking Advantage Of PayPal
PayPal Buyer Protection exists to protect online consumers. But some VPS clients are abusing it.This is how they do it:
- They purchase a VPS or a dedicated server.
- Host sets it up and resells the login credentials.
- They did not purchase that. It's an unauthorized transaction,
- They never received the service.
- PayPal will give them a refund.
- Host is left with a used server and unpaid.
Why This Scam Works
You're now asking yourself, "Why won't PayPal give the buyer a refund?"Here's the catch: web hosting is an intangible product, not a tangible one. That is:
- No tracking of delivery occurs.
- It's difficult to demonstrate the customer even used the service.
- The scammers are aware of this—and they exploit it.
How Hosting Providers Can Protect Themselves
If you are in the business of selling VPS or hosting services then these are some steps that you can take to protect yourself:- Have customers sign an agreement prior to shipping the server.
- Avoid using PayPal for high-risk or high-value transactions.
- Include a "no refund" clause on digital services in your terms of service.
- Track when and how servers were accessed (lawfully).
- Ban spammers and report them to hosting communities and groups.