PayPal Asks Customer To Travel Back In Time To Make $0 Payment
Whenever a financial institution says you've owed them money for nearly 40 years, it's cause for concern. But luckily Justin, who sent us this screenshot of his PayPal line of credit account overview, has a reasonable $0 payment to make.
Justin really should consider going back in time to pay up, though, because stagflation really did a number on interest rates.
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Comments:
@MostlyHarmless: You wouldn't want to make the customer support people feel bad about themselves, now. Everyone must suck equally. Some just suck more equally than others. No, it's not too early for that literary reference...BAM.
@MostlyHarmless: Good grief! They couldn't even do the Y2K problem correctly! They're almost ten years late on that!
@katstermonster: There's an animated version on Hulu at the moment. Was I the only one miffed they changed the ending in that TNT movie?
@MostlyHarmless: I come across bad programming all of the time.. many times, it's the only interaction I have with a company, in that I won't buy anything from them after seeing their website.
@j-o-h-n: or were you just pointing out why it may have appeared, ala AstroPig7 below? Hard to tell when lmgtfy is so mocking in tone.
@AstroPig7: I was just coming here to see if anyone had pointed out this fact. I wonder if some human put a zero in a date field, or of the programmer just messed up the code causing the date field to get the value of zero.
@GMFish: Amen to that. I bought one thing from eBay, years ago. Never went back. Canceled PayPal after hearing stories about how they sequester all your PayPal money whenever they want.
Sold on eBay for years, bought on eBay for years, used Paypal for both.
1. Never pay for an item with Paypal using your bank account, ALWAYS draw from a credit card so you have 100% protection if you need a chargeback.
2. Never keep a balance in your Paypal account, that is what your bank is for.
3. Keep copies of everything.
I have had one or two small battles with Paypal, won then both. Not hard to do if you have your act together.
@AstroPig7: It's fairly trivial now to treat a "zero" date, which this is, as though it were a "null" date, i.e. an empty field. So there's little excuse for having done this. This well could be bad programming. Or, a much-less-plausible explanation is it's some kind of database corruption, which is somehow generating a zero date that would not otherwise have been there.
@PLATTWORX: Agreed, but you shouldn't have to battle with them. I've had the same kind of situation, and it's 3 or 4 hours of my life I'll never get back being on hold with morons at PayPal. Life is too short to deal with people intent on ripping you off.
@AstroPig7: not *completely* true.
there are different standards for recording time/dates - POSIX time, sometimes referred to as "unix time", is the number of seconds since Jan 1, 1970 at midnight, one of the most common implementations.

















pay with a $0 check.