• In the years since we first launched YippieMove, we’ve been contacted by numerous customers asking us to accept PayPal. While we have accepted PayPal from a few clients who were based in countries where Google Checkout wasn’t supported, this is rare (and we’ve transferred the funds away from PayPal quickly). Generally clients who are asking to use PayPal do not fall in this category.

    There is however a very good reason why we do not accept PayPal payment: it’s simply not a good experience. It’s not good for our customers, and it’s not good for us. PayPal has a well established record of mistreating its customers with little or no recourse. Once PayPal has arbitrarily frozen the money of a customer, whether it’s a merchant or private user, they provide virtually no recourse. There is no-one you can call, they are not regulated like a bank, and there is no ombudsman. Your money is simply beyond your reach, at the mercy of a few moody customer service reps.

    That’s just not an experience we want to provide to our users. Nor, frankly, one we can accept for our own business.
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  • We are all familiar with the expression “If you got a hammer everything looks like a nail.” For many people, email is the hammer and local files tend to be the nail. At several occasions I’ve heard users complaining over their email service is ‘crappy’ because they cannot ‘send their files.’

    Only a few years ago, the industry standard for maximum attachment sizes were one, or perhaps five megabytes. Then Gmail came along, allowing users to email files up to 25 megabytes. People were cheering. Finally they could email their 20 megabytes Power Point-presentations to 30 people in one go (without even knowing it was 600 megabyte of data that left the server). All of the sudden, Gmail’s seemingly impossible-to-fill storage quota started to fill up. First 25% full, then 50% and then exceeded 75%. How on earth did we get there? Only a few years earlier, 1GB was plenty for years worth of email.
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