By Solomon GrundyPosted Tuesday 2nd September 2008 21:58 GMT
Some guy is complaining because he can't Spam his previous ebay buyers, and everyone else is complaining that their crappy phone service isn't treating them right?
Why is any of this a surprise? It's an ebay company - which means that corporate policy prevents any sort of meaningful help or contact. Hell, even ebay admitted the product sucked and was sorry they bought it. Why would users/customers expect something good?
By Jason HarveyPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 00:52 GMT
this is why charge backs via the credit card company are usually the only remedy. And possibly charging them with credit fraud, but then you're out the litigation charges.
Use the free services... get a real phone line for real phone calls. Dump any direct access from paypal to any/all accounts if not just dumping paypal altogether. like someone else already posted... the net is a snake pit (re: thieves den) and you will get bitten even if you're being careful.
By Solomon GrundyPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 01:41 GMT
What the hell are you blathering on about man? Your open source OS and browser seem to have lead you astray... no one has said anything remotely related to your comment.
By DavidAtkinsonPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:08 GMT
I had a hardware skype phone. A few months ago I started getting instant messages that made it crash. Could that be the vector?
I also wonder how the sender got my skype username - it was a random string of characters, not listed in the directory, and only ever used for SkypeOut.
I switched to SipGate through the built in VOIP client on my mobile.
By Bronek KozickiPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:17 GMT
yeah, right, and have somene take over your box because of broken SSL package, or maybe via trojan. The belief that there is secure OS out there is fundamentally flawed; any OS is only as secure as the user is smart.
By Ian EmeryPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:19 GMT
No he doesn't, no mention of what OS he is using at all.
Ebay suck, it does not matter what OS you are using, they robbed me two years back, took a LARGE payment from my Debit card when I had paid by Credit Card and left me with nearly £100 in bank charges.
Their excuse was, I had registered my Debit Card first, so that was what they would use; even though I entered my Credit card details and had an email receipt confirming the Credit card's last 4 digits; so much for being able to register multiple cards.
No apology, no refund, and if I took it to the bank the only person to suffer would have been the seller.
Paris, cos I like it when she sucks.
Not used Ebay or Paypal since, and stopped using Skype when Ebay bought it.
By DavePosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:34 GMT
Considering there is no information as to how this has transpired, don't you think you're jumping the gun here? I know you need to tell everyone how superior your intellect is because you use a 1970's command prompt 50% of the time (OH THE POWER OF THE COMMAND PROMPT) but until the cause is directed at Windows (which it probably won't be) then quit pushing your little Linux agendas.
By EwanPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:51 GMT
A few months ago I received an email from Paypal saying my account had been debitted, then another, then another, all with reference to my Skype account.
I immediately tried to login to Skype but got an invalid password message, so I emailed both Skype and Paypal. Paypal responded pretty quickly with a dismissive email, and Skype ignored me.
Since my account was still open for abuse by the scammer, I figured the only option for me was to cancel the account in Paypal and call my bank, who immediately cancelled the credit card.
After about 4 days, Skype finally responded to one of my pleading emails, saying they had reset the password for me but that any fraud was nothing to do with them. I logged in to find my call history consisted of calling a premium number abroad.
About 3 months after the event, my bank contacted me to say Skype had agreed that the transactions had been fradulent after all, and my money would be refunded.
Avoid Skype like the plague, they're the worst company I've ever dealt with for customer service.
Most premium number scams would be pretty simple for Skype to block, simple don't allow any calls to a set of blacklisted numbers, and look for unusual calling patterns to new numbers generating large charges, but they're obviously not interested in helping their customers.
By StevenPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:52 GMT
eBay & Co are awful for customer support and always blame the user.
My eBay account was hijacked and customer services basically said my password was too weak or I clicked a phishing email and that it must be my fault...
Not being funny but I delete any email from ebay because its always spam. Im behind a proxy server, hardware firewall and kapersky AV. I only use my account on my home machine, I have SSL encrypted email set to use plain text only, use different addresses for different things eg ebay@ paypal@ etc and my password at the time (now changed obviously) was R%£mw(n^8I9 How in gods green earth is that an easy to crack password eBay????
This whole thing with Skype sounds very similar, think eBay & Co need to stop blaming other people and take a serious look at their [lack of] security.
By FathomsDownPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 09:24 GMT
About 18 months ago I moved away from Skype after they cancelled my Skypein number with almost no notice.
I'm now using another VOIP provider, I don't need to keep a PC on all day, it costs much less for outgoing calls (and its still free for VOIP to VOIP calls) and the call quality is much higher.
Skype was good in its day but the other providers have caught up fast and now offer a better service IMHO.
By CraigPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 09:34 GMT
There have been enough incidents now with Paypal, eBay, etc. that anyone who uses anything that allows auto-charging via Paypal is either startlingly naive or simply stupid. To make it worse, some people who read sites like this STILL do it.
I have a hardware Skype phone (the Netgear one) for the wife to phone her friends and family who are abroad. She calls one elderly relative using Skype-out but this has a manual credit update where I refuse to store card details on the Skype account and have to re-enter them every time I want to add £10. If someone hacks this account, the best they'll get is about £10.
As said above, t'internet is full of bad guys. Work on the assumption that regardless of how good you are at this IT lark, you will get ripped-off eventually and plan accordingly.
By Dale RichardsPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 10:11 GMT
Well not me, but my girlfriend. One day she received notification that about £95 had been debited from her PayPal account and credited to Skype. That was odd, because she's never even had a Skype account. Does this make it more of a PayPal problem?
To be fair to PayPal, she did eventually get the money returned.
By Krystan HonourPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 11:47 GMT
Happened to me recently.
I got an email stating that there had been a paypal transaction to skype, I tried to log in to my skype account and found that i could !!
There was no records of credits or calls so I spoke to paypal , who agreed that this was odd and also decided that my account had been accessed not by myself.
The amount was credited back to my credit card within 4 days.
I changed all security on my account etc, I still have , and never had had my paypal linked to skype.
By JonPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 12:44 GMT
THAT's why I had an attempt to remove skype funds from my paypal account about 2 months ago. I was then locked out of Paypal until I reset my details - they still won't let me do bank debits - and when they unlocked my account there was a mandate to pay agreement thing still left - I deleted that pretty quick! So I guess they might have hacked my skype account initially.
Thanks for bringing this to my attention guys!
attempted trransfer of funds from PP a/c to another Skype user #
By MikePosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 13:30 GMT
I discovered that two (unsuccessful) attempts were made to transfer funds from my PayPal account to someone else's Skype account. Why they were thwarted is not clear. There are two withdrawals and two refunds in my PP statement. Needless to say, both PP and Skype have been totally unhelpful, though they have told me that my account was compromised in some way. BTW, I have no arrangement set up to transfer funds from PP to Skype in my own name.
I have certainly not been phished and there is no malware on my computer. I have changed my passwords at Skype and PP to be on the safe side.
It is, iof course, always a good idea to use strong passwords and different passwords on related accounts - although the attached account suggests that someone has found a way round this.
Be careful out there in cyberspace.
attempted transfer of funds from PP a/c to another Skype user #
By MikePosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 13:38 GMT
I discovered that two (unsuccessful) attempts were made to transfer funds from my PayPal account to someone else's Skype account. Why they were thwarted is not clear. There are two withdrawals and two refunds in my PP statement. Needless to say, both PP and Skype have been totally unhelpful, though they have told me that my account was compromised in some way. BTW, I have no arrangement set up to transfer funds from PP to Skype in my own name.
I have certainly not been phished and there is no malware on my computer. I have changed my passwords at Skype and PP to be on the safe side.
It is, of course, always a good idea to use strong passwords and different passwords on related accounts - although the article suggests that someone has found a way round this.
By StevePosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 14:32 GMT
Skype is a p2p setup, almost everyone using it effectively volunteers their computer to be used as a forwarder, so catching Skype traffic can't be difficult.
It may be encrypted, but is there any chance they use SSL keys generated on a Debian system... ?
By Rick AxonPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 17:01 GMT
Happened to me too.
@Mr I don't read the articles, but pour over the comments - Solomon Grundy #
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 17:53 GMT
Well that is it really :)
And someone beat me to it, but hey.
Just to clarify, it looks like the compormise may have been done using keyboard loggers or some form of client side intrusion; they got the passwords and just flipped control of the accounts to themselves.
If there is no break in on the server side, then it looks like the clients may have been compromised.
By ScottPosted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 23:54 GMT
It would be far more news-worthy for the editors the "El Reg" to seek out anyone who has had an email responded to by Ebay or one of its minion. There won't be many, if any, found.
I have received many emails that appeared to be from PayPal or Ebay. None were genuine and neither PayPal or Ebay were the least bit concerned. It wasn't going to cost them a cent even if I had responded to the scams.
Why anyone would allow automatic debiting to take place without per-transaction pre-approval baffles me. The companies involved will work hard to see that they get their money. Those same companies will do as little as possible to protect the funds of others. The bare minimum the law requires, and that only if forced.
Slamming has a long history in the telephone industry. It is easy for the companies to do, often goes unnoticed for at least a few billing cycles, and when noticed it is your word against their "records". A huge money maker.
By Joe MontanaPosted Thursday 4th September 2008 09:26 GMT
I never saw the attraction of skype...
A proprietary protocol that only works with a single service, requires you to use their crappy software, and does it have any third party device support?
I've always stuck with providers that use the standard SIP protocol, there are tons out there with different rates and different levels of support.
Because the protocol is standard, you can choose your provider based on the best rates to the destinations you call, and switch at will.
You do have to choose inbound numbers a bit more carefully, since changing those is more hassle - ie having to tell everyone who calls you the new number, number portability would be good here. On the other hand, you can get a small voip router with an analogue port, and connect it to your regular phone service (which you have anyway if you use dsl, and it costs you nothing extra to receive calls on it).
You also get a choice of devices, there are tons of software phones with various features, a large number of hardware phones, adapters to convert analogue phones to sip devices and some cellphones have wifi and sip clients built in these days (eg nokia n95), so you don't need to keep a noisy computer running, and with something like an n95 you can access your sip service wherever you have wifi (or potentially 3g cellular).
By DaveJPosted Thursday 4th September 2008 14:22 GMT
There are many issues with Skype and PayPal. Not only does Skype have these issues, but Skype is also based on p2p using supernodes - supernodes allow other users communications to be relayed through your computer, and you don't even know it's going on. This opens up your computer to serious security issues. PayPal is just notoriously bad, but even Raketu uses PayPal, and Google and MoneyBookers for payments (at least a choice). Raketu has their own p2p without supernodes, and uses SIP for dialin, dialout. I hear they are releasing their dialin next week and the ability to attach any third pary SIP client to their network - finally. You can make calls from mobiles, laptops, and they just released a webphone for dialout calling without a download. Great service, great rates, great support and no billing problems.
By rick buckPosted Thursday 4th September 2008 18:36 GMT
I understand some of the credit card thefts in the recent past is/was being carried out by gangs that have infiltrated the Networking Environment, and therefore have access to network racks and can capture and monitor "inside the network", so if it is not encrypted, they can read and capture it all.
IT> Nobody said you had to be smart...just conniving.
By SlyPosted Thursday 11th September 2008 13:52 GMT
If you're fed up with Skype try AIM Call Out. I've used Skype before they were bought by ebay, but since they've been bought out they've become like every other e-bay company. Bad service and more expensive.
Recently I've started using AIM Call Out. There rates are better than Skypes plus you don't always have to have your headset and mic if you use their web connect feature (connects 2 phones directly). They recently added SIP support as well.
By Paul StimpsonPosted Monday 15th September 2008 10:12 GMT
I recently received some good advice never to use debit cards with a Paypal account. In the UK the Consumer Credia Act protects you if you use a credit card and your card company must refund any fraudulent transactions. Debit cards do not enjoy this protection and if your PayPal account or something linked to it gets compromised and your debit card gets raped the cash has already gone, your bank does not have to refund you and your only remedy is to try and get the money back from whoever took it.
Comments on: Skype ignores PayPal siphoning hijack scheme
I Don't Get It... #
By Solomon Grundy Posted Tuesday 2nd September 2008 21:58 GMT
Well, that's it for Skype for me! #
By David Spencer Posted Tuesday 2nd September 2008 22:09 GMT
Don't drop the matter. #
By zonky Posted Tuesday 2nd September 2008 22:17 GMT
Who owns Skype & PayPal? #
By Karl Rasmusson Posted Tuesday 2nd September 2008 23:19 GMT
ffs #
By wayne tavitt Posted Tuesday 2nd September 2008 23:28 GMT
@ David Spencer #
By Rick Axon Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 00:20 GMT
Paypal has been/is/always will be broken #
By Jason Harvey Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 00:52 GMT
"I'm fairly IT savy" #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 01:01 GMT
re:"I'm fairly IT savy" #
By Solomon Grundy Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 01:41 GMT
@ Solomon Grundy #
By Sarev Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 03:12 GMT
@Rick Axon Re: @ David Spencer #
By TeeCee Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 06:54 GMT
It's worse than that Jim... #
By Nigel Wright Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 07:08 GMT
Buffer overflow #
By DavidAtkinson Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:08 GMT
@AC 01:01 #
By Bronek Kozicki Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:17 GMT
Ah, yes, the three great lies... #
By Dr Patrick J R Harkin Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:18 GMT
@Grundy #
By Ian Emery Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:19 GMT
@Linux tossers #
By Dave Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:34 GMT
hacked #
By Daniel Garcia Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:50 GMT
I had a very similar experience #
By Ewan Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:51 GMT
Doesn't suprise me one bit... #
By Steven Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 08:52 GMT
I'm an ex-Skyper #
By FathomsDown Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 09:24 GMT
Recurring Paypal #
By Craig Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 09:34 GMT
Conned here #
By Dale Richards Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 10:11 GMT
@FathomsDown et al #
By BlueGreen Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 10:17 GMT
Neither Skype nor Paypal have an incentive to fix this quickly #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 10:31 GMT
Worth a try..... #
By Richard Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 10:56 GMT
Something similar #
By Krystan Honour Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 11:47 GMT
I'm using Sipgate #
By Steve Evans Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 11:51 GMT
I see! #
By Jon Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 12:44 GMT
attempted trransfer of funds from PP a/c to another Skype user #
By Mike Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 13:30 GMT
attempted transfer of funds from PP a/c to another Skype user #
By Mike Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 13:38 GMT
Maybe #
By Steve Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 14:32 GMT
@ Ian Emery #
By Rick Axon Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 17:01 GMT
@Mr I don't read the articles, but pour over the comments - Solomon Grundy #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 17:53 GMT
A More Productive Approach #
By Scott Posted Wednesday 3rd September 2008 23:54 GMT
Avoid skype like the plague #
By Joe Montana Posted Thursday 4th September 2008 09:26 GMT
I use Raketu #
By DaveJ Posted Thursday 4th September 2008 14:22 GMT
Nside Network Work #
By rick buck Posted Thursday 4th September 2008 18:36 GMT
Use AIM Call Out #
By Sly Posted Thursday 11th September 2008 13:52 GMT
Paypal protection #
By Paul Stimpson Posted Monday 15th September 2008 10:12 GMT