Osi and everyone else.
The simplest way around these new changes are to do what in fact Osi has already done - i.e. set-up and use a 'stand-alone' account preferably at a different Bank(with no connections to any of your other accounts) for your eBay transactions. When you want to add/withdraw money from that account do it manually at your bank branch over the counter. That way all that is ever at risk are those funds in that 'isolated' account - and depending on that country's banking regulations (which are still fairly good here in the UK) even if your account was compromised by Cyber-Attacks, you will still have some protection from the bank and possibly PayPal in this event. If you keep a 'float' of say $300-500 in the account then you have mitigated any risk capped any possible losses accordingly - on top of protecting other accounts you may hold at any other banking institution.
It seems to me that this change is mainly about eBay making a grab for the % that PayPal is already charging.
Although I have never sold on eBay, all I increasingly hear is a growing dissatisfaction from sellers on there. It's quite possible (as what always happens in free markets) that another similar operator (like ETSY etc) will step in and sweep up all the disgruntled eBay sellers by offering more reasonable terms.
If/when this happens eBay will have been the author of there own demise just because of their own unnecessary greed - it's happened before and it will happen again!
The simplest way around these new changes are to do what in fact Osi has already done - i.e. set-up and use a 'stand-alone' account preferably at a different Bank(with no connections to any of your other accounts) for your eBay transactions. When you want to add/withdraw money from that account do it manually at your bank branch over the counter. That way all that is ever at risk are those funds in that 'isolated' account - and depending on that country's banking regulations (which are still fairly good here in the UK) even if your account was compromised by Cyber-Attacks, you will still have some protection from the bank and possibly PayPal in this event. If you keep a 'float' of say $300-500 in the account then you have mitigated any risk capped any possible losses accordingly - on top of protecting other accounts you may hold at any other banking institution.
It seems to me that this change is mainly about eBay making a grab for the % that PayPal is already charging.
Although I have never sold on eBay, all I increasingly hear is a growing dissatisfaction from sellers on there. It's quite possible (as what always happens in free markets) that another similar operator (like ETSY etc) will step in and sweep up all the disgruntled eBay sellers by offering more reasonable terms.
If/when this happens eBay will have been the author of there own demise just because of their own unnecessary greed - it's happened before and it will happen again!
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