my point stands. you were unable to connect those dots without being led by the nose 🤣🤣🤣
my point stands. you were unable to connect those dots without being led by the nose 🤣🤣🤣
Nah, your dots don't make sense. I've worked with contract language before. I've been in a union and I'm incredibly detail oriented. You're the one acting smug and high and mighty on the internet instead of making points in good faith.
thats funny. ive drafted thousands of contracts. my entire life has been working in the unions or along side unions. you dont know the first thing when it comes to contract language and you proved that with your original post on this thread claiming that what paypal did was theft.
Funny you say that because you didn't realize a Verizon cancelation fee was a part of the contract vs a punishment for breach of contract.
the cancellation fee is a completely separate clause in the TOS than breaking your contract. you see, there are some contracts you can pay the cancellation fee and your all done. others there is a cancelation fee but there is also the broken service fee you agreed to which most people never read
Those are legal terms in the contract. This is vastly different than "you give up all the money in your money holding account if we say you violated the contract". If PayPal wanted this to be legal they would reverse the 5 figure transaction and tell the user to find another company to do that.
that is basically how it is worded. if you violate PayPal TOS, they have the right to seize your funds depending on the violation. thats what makes this whole thing so funny. you idiots cant even wrap your heads around the basic concept of it
bsky.app/profile/syph...
and if you read the TOS, it is plain as day that what that programmer did was a violation of TOS and is paying the consequences. plain and simple. they dont hide it, they dont mislead you about it. it is 100% legal and within their rights. all you have to do is read
Well, you can't read the post despite me posting it twice. Go bother someone else with bad faith arguments.