> First, no company is ever “legally prohibited” from telling you what specific section of the TOS they allege that you violated Again, misplaced assumption and personal opinion. With some circumstances, especially if…
> The issue here is that this company did not violate PayPal's TOS Untrue. Often the exact breach is legally prohibited from being publicly shared, but if a company is banned, then a TOS breach has happened. There is an…
Ummm....no. As a software engineer, I can assure you there are not "thousands of PayPal employees" that can just ban businesses at will. I don't even think engineers working on that particular piece of software have any…
> First, no company is ever “legally prohibited” from telling you what specific section of the TOS they allege that you violated Again, misplaced assumption and personal opinion. With some circumstances, especially if…
> The issue here is that this company did not violate PayPal's TOS Untrue. Often the exact breach is legally prohibited from being publicly shared, but if a company is banned, then a TOS breach has happened. There is an…
Ummm....no. As a software engineer, I can assure you there are not "thousands of PayPal employees" that can just ban businesses at will. I don't even think engineers working on that particular piece of software have any…