providing valuable supplier info and contact information, invoices.
Anyone can see how Amazon takes that information and uses it to source inventory and I'm sure Paypal/ebay will eventually do the same. Not that I'm one to participate in lawsuits but doesnt that sound like another one waiting to happen?
I have a question though. I usually sell expensive high end electronics and occasionally I get some brand new ones. I rarely seem to have a problem selling new (other) unless they go over 600 but Ive been selling on a particular new stealth going on 3 months now and I figured it would be ok to list these brand new sealed electronics as "new" as that is what they are and they are under $200.
I had a $1000 paypal withdrawal limit already and it had passed 30 days since they gave it to me so after that I looked in to it and found I needed to "confirm" the card with the 4-digit paypal code. I hate that they changed that from where you did it from the get go. Anyhow I did that, waited two days, got an email saying dude forwarded it and hopefully be taken care of in 24 hours. Heard that solved many peoples problems before. But then they hit me with asking for supplier info, invoices, proof of shipment AND photo id, proof of address. Says account impact is medium.
These particular items I have itemized receipts for. Are those sufficient for supplier info and invoices? Of course I have tracking for the shipments. Is it just a gamble about not providing photo id and proof address or should I at least make a ⊗⊗⊗⊗ proof of address?
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