If the bank/s know about the Trustly and fleabay password demand, I'm surprised that they haven't declared them persona non grata and reported it to AUSTRAC
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Actually the cynic in me suspects they smell a fee.
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If the bank/s know about the Trustly and fleabay password demand, I'm surprised that they haven't declared them persona non grata and reported it to AUSTRAC
Homepage | AUSTRAC
Actually the cynic in me suspects they smell a fee.
POD - first don’t use any link sent by e-mail to provide account details. Always log into eBay and then follow the links on the site and go to the seller account page - or look for a message in the messages area and follow those links only.
EBay still claim there are several ways to verify your account but I have not verified this info is current:
https://www.ebay.com.au/help/selling...etails?id=4796
https://www.ebay.com.au/help/selling...seller?id=4792
The micro-deposit method is meant to be the best and involves you logging into your bank account yourself and then two small deposits (in cents) are made and you confirm the amounts.
Alternatively on the eBay community forum it is claimed you can get around the Trustly verification process by selecting “Bank Not Listed” and then follow the prompts to manually upload proof of your account so they can verify from the scanned pages. It is your name they are verifying matches the bank account and your eBay account.
The last option that most now do is open a new transaction account with a different bank, then follow the Trustly process, they will instantly verify your account (all done electronically and automatically) and then once verified you immediately change the password and you are all safe again.
Trustly is a very safe organisation, highly regulated and operates in Sweden which has stricter privacy laws than Australia, and no password details are ever shared with eBay. But the method above means no money is ever at risk.
Good luck and do post the solution if you find one. People have been raising this issue for many years now and nothing has changed, so my guess is one of the solutions above will work. It has all been driven by Australian regulations around anti-money laundering or something like that.
There is never a need to know the account password to deposit money.
Millions of people have their wages deposited weekly, without ever sharing their password.
Yes, if they want to confirm the account they could deposit a few cents and ask the account holder to confirm the amount, like a MFA Multi Factor Authentication text sent to a mobile, up to a dollar and you'd only have a 1 in 99 chance of guessing the amount.
I wonder if scammers are starting find a way around ebays checks and balances. I purchased a pressure washer hose a couple of weeks ago with free delivery. The seller contacted me asking me to direct deposit a small amount to cover the postage as the company they have a deal with will not deliver to my post code. This is legit and fine. However he wanted me to do this outside the ebay system. So my answer is "no". I did say if he updated the advert to add a postage amount I would be happy to pay that, however he refused to do this ... weird.
So, he didn't get his postage paid.
seeya
Shane L.
Giving them a password and then immediately changing it is such an elegant solution, I had not thought of it. I won't be giving anyone my working account password even under those conditions, but a separate low-balance account, let the baby have his bottle and then change it straight away looks like a very good plan.
Why not try giving a fake password and see what happens?
Definitely don't provide your password - this turned up as a practice in some non-bank lenders recently who wanted them so that they could check prospective borrower's current balances: the problem with that is that if you provide your password to a third party you're breaching your agreement with the bank and you're not only in default you're not covered.
Just to close this matter off; I managed to update my account details via one of the above links (I think it was the second one) which took me through a few hoops where I just needed a BSB and account number. Just got the balance paid into my account today. Password not shared, pyment in my account, happy days. Thanks again DiscoDB.