Depends how much money he has in the account.Is it worth the risk?
Depends how much money he has in the account.Is it worth the risk?
So like, some kid decided to buy some accounts off of me, then he chargedback for no raisin.
Paypal be liek, "yeah no, we gotta limit u cuz fuck u that's y"
Without adding my SSN or that gay bs with Photo ID, can I get the money off of that paypal, or make it not limited again. I assume I might have to make some phone calls.
Is it worth the risk?
Well I mean, you signed up and agreed to their terms and conditions - you knew you had to be 18 or over to use it (or should know - if you don't, you shouldn't even be using paypal). They only keep it until your 18 (in 99% of the cases), even if you have thousands or hundreds of thousands in there - the only reason they should limit it permanently is if you do something worse than just signing up when you're under 18, such as fraud.Under age (Or Not) PayPal should not be able to just take your hard earned money.
Look who's talking... the ironyWell I mean, you signed up and agreed to their terms and conditions - you knew you had to be 18 or over to use it (or should know - if you don't, you shouldn't even be using paypal). They only keep it until your 18 (in 99% of the cases), even if you have thousands or hundreds of thousands in there - the only reason they should limit it permanently is if you do something worse than just signing up when you're under 18, such as fraud.
It's not like paypal is the only payment system online which you can use with emails/simple usernames, and there are others which you can be under 18 for (I believe, haven't done too much research) - if you were really desperate, you would sign up on one of these.
There's no real grounds for complaining, they're not doing anything you weren't expecting them to or didn't sign up for.
It's not against the law, it's just against their ToS.If you're under 18, you shouldn't have a paypal account.
Learn to law.
After someone explained the exact same thing to me I just said, I understood.Look who's talking... the irony![]()
It's not against the law, it's just against their ToS.
Just add your SSN and photo ID. PayPal isn't going to steal your identity, and you'll only have to deal with the IRS if you go over $20,000 gross income payments in 1 calendar year.
If you are under 18, they will probably just reject the form of ID.
If you want to be safe, just wait until your 18 and then submit the ID.
I submitted my ID once I was 18 to get my PP fully verified and they didn't even care that the account was obviously made before I was 18.
But erm... fraud is against the law?It's not against the law, it's just against their ToS.
Just add your SSN and photo ID. PayPal isn't going to steal your identity, and you'll only have to deal with the IRS if you go over $20,000 gross income payments in 1 calendar year.
If you are under 18, they will probably just reject the form of ID.
If you want to be safe, just wait until your 18 and then submit the ID.
I submitted my ID once I was 18 to get my PP fully verified and they didn't even care that the account was obviously made before I was 18.
OP said PP was limited because of chargebacks and they wanted him to confirm his identity.But erm... fraud is against the law?
Oh also, although I doubt this has happened in small cases like this, but this could be seen as money laundering... :3
Yes, he did say that - but the reason he made the post was because he was under 18 and was looking for another solution. He has lied about his age, meaning he has a different identity to the one he has given paypal - if someone wanted to avoid tax, they could sure as hell do that by creating multiple paypal accounts under different names/ages. That is why it can be seen as fraud/money laundering.OP said PP was limited because of chargebacks and they wanted him to confirm his identity.
I don't see anything related to fraud or money laundering mentioned?
