For reals? I sell very little on TeePublic…like $5/mo. They overpaid artists back in November and need everyone to pay them back. For me, that’s $.23. If you really need the $.23, I’m not sure you’re going to last as a company.
I don't get it? Did you read it? You can just not do anything and you will get .23 less next time. Some probably got more overpaid and this is for them
These mails probably were sent automatically without checking how much the artists owed. So it isn't really that they need that money but that they just sent this to everyone.
Once upon a time, my landlord's management company tried to shake me down for an additional day of rent. I pointed out that my rental agreement stated I would pay exactly $x every month, so they can pound sand. They, too, decided to "let it slide." How magnanimous.
(Edit: I just remembered, first they tried to argue the contract shouldn't have been written that way so I still had to pay. Wtf.)
I swear they must have created a new spreadsheet with an off-by-one error somewhere and mailed out hundreds of bills instead of double checking.
This is a typical scam, convince the victim you refunded them too much, and ask for the difference back. Only thing is they never refunded you in the first place. They just use the inspect tool to edit your balance client side
one they just transferred money from savings into checking, then doctored a screenshot and put that on the screen instead (photoshopped by a second actor also accessing the pc remotely) to make it look like an errant payment came in... of $14,000.
they almost got taken, made it all the way to the bank to pull the money out (to take to moneygram or something iirc) and the teller shut it down right there. wouldn't let 'em. sent 'em to me instead.
the screenshot was nearly perfect.... the font wasn't quite right and they fucked up the math at the bottom showing that sub-account's balance.. forgot about the cents, just put an even dollar amount there. i dunno why they changed that line, it would have been 'correct'
But will there even be anything left of that after credit card fees? I mean I guess they are a huge company, maybe they pay less in those fees. Then again so are credit card providers. I'm sure they want their share too.
Or any company. Accountants absolutely hate Pennies missing. Dollars are easier to stomach but Pennies makes them nervous that some miscalculation that signals a bigger issue is going on.
They're not missing funds though, it's not a discrepancy in accounting. They overpaid , they know where the money is, and it's simply a business decision whether to recover it or not.
They could have simply filtered on overpayment above some arbitrary value based around recovery vs goodwill.
Or they could have let it slide, but still notify people so that they wouldn't be wondering if it was an accounting error.
But no, they want to recover 23 cents which is well below the cost of everyone's time and effort to deal with, on both sides of the transaction.
They probably sent it to everyone they detected they overpaid, no matter the amount. I’m sure they don’t actually care about $0.23 - it’s the people who sell a lot more than you they are worried about.
I'd absolutely pay that 23 cents PayPal invoice as there's a fixed 35 cents fixed fee on every transaction plus 3%, so if you pay it, it costs them 13 cents
i think it's higher now. but yea, it's gonna cost them. plus the labor involved with setting up the whole 'get the money back' operation, and receiving and tracking what does come back.
This was my dad. He fucking despised capitalism and giant corporations, and forcing them to mail him a check for $.15 several times a month was his go-to antagonism. He might, legitimately have been a facet of the fall of sears and the one holding the USPS together, the way he forced sears to mail him a check every few days.