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Beware of a new kind of fraud

24

Comments

  • DrNutellaDrNutella Member
    edited July 2025

    PayPal used to side with sellers blindly before. So we all started going around PayPal to use credit cards. As PayPal lost buyer market share, their tone changed.

    May help to open a BBB against PayPal. Many global and US brands react to that quickly.

  • @zed said:

    @CloudHopper said: Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period

    Interesting plot twist, so essentially no provider can declare "no refunds" when dealing with a citizen of the EU. How is this enforceable though? Also, I'm moving to the EU hugs.

    To the best of my knowledge, the provider has to be incorporated in the EU in some form for this to apply. If not, the laws of the country in which the provider is incorporated apply.

  • RubbenRubben Member
    edited July 2025

    @barbarza said:

    @zed said:

    @CloudHopper said: Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period

    Interesting plot twist, so essentially no provider can declare "no refunds" when dealing with a citizen of the EU. How is this enforceable though? Also, I'm moving to the EU hugs.

    To the best of my knowledge, the provider has to be incorporated in the EU in some form for this to apply. If not, the laws of the country in which the provider is incorporated apply.

    Afaik it applies to any company who sells to EU customers. Offering EU locations and having the site's language in English (Indian company) does prove that they are targeting EU customers, so the 14 day withdrawal right should apply.

  • Why the fuck do you send password in plain text? It can be intercepted and your vps could be taken over and who knows what junk my be put on it.
    You on crack op?:) you wanted to share client detail then got called over

    Thanked by 1ralf
  • @NeedDeal said:
    Why the fuck do you send password in plain text? It can be intercepted and your vps could be taken over and who knows what junk my be put on it.
    You on crack op?:) you wanted to share client detail then got called over

    I'm not a SmokyHosts customer but from my personal experience, it's... the norm? Except those that let you or force you to use public key, almost all of them are sending the root password in plaintext via email. Probably it's the default from whatever management panel they use. Some are even displaying the default root password on their panel. I don't know whether it's encrypted behind the scene. But as much as I don't like that practice, personally it's not really a big deal unless you're really lazy to change the default password.

    Thanked by 1SmokyHosts
  • @SmokyHosts said:
    Beware of a new kind of fraud

    This is at best what is called "Friendly Fraud", it' nothing new and it's not even a true fraud. In fact it is the most common type of "fraud". And you did your best to maximize this type of "fraud" by not providing refunds. What did you expect?

    @SmokyHosts said:
    The customer will purchase a VPS/server from you and when you deploy the VPS/server and share the access details, they simply claim a refund saying that the access details were shared in plain text (mind it, its the access details of the VPS/server that were shared in plain text, while WHMCS by default hashes their WHMCS login passwords as per GDPR rules). If they had any sense, all they had to do was to change their VPS/server password and never share it with the host again!

    You admit to sharing VPS/server access details in plain text and think it's a good idea to complain about "fraud" on a public forum? There's no reason whatsoever to share those in plain text.

    @SmokyHosts said:
    To make things worst, if you don't offer refund, they raise it to PayPal saying the product wasn't delivered, and no matter how much proof you share with PayPal, they simply say that they "advice" to deliver items by trackable courier companies, without even recognizing that it is a digital delivery and not a physical one!

    It is a common and very reasonable expectation that the access details of the VPS/server will not be shared in plain text. So yes, the product was not delivered. When you buy a car, you expect it to have an engine inside, do you not?

    @SmokyHosts said:
    If anybody wants to know the full details of such a client, to be on the safe side, feel free to PM me. I will share the details of one such customer if you are a patron provider here.

    No comment as this speaks for itself.

    @SmokyHosts said:

    @jackb said:

    If anybody wants to know the full details of such a client

    Don't do that. Report them on maxmind and fraudrecord at most.

    You should never share customer personal details to unrelated third parties without the customers consent, or - having been instructed to by court/law enforcement, regardless of if the account is in bad standing.

    Thanks, already reported to fraudrecord

    Great job, you sent personal data without cosent to "fraudrecord" and now an unknown number of companies/entities have access to that data, including many of those outside EU. Fraudrecord website makes a lot of incorrect statement about anonimization when in fact it's not properly done and the data you shared is easy to reverse, and it is still considered personal data under GDPR. (There's another post of mine on let if you want more details.)

    Let's make a summary:
    You decided not to provide refunds thus maximizing friendly fraud.
    You shared VPS access details in plain text.
    Your customer made a chargeback request to paypal. (You could have minimized your risks here by providing an easy way for customers to get refunds, but you didn't.)
    Your customer won the chargeback.
    You decided to share his personal data with fraudrecord and compain about it on a public forum.

    Thanked by 2zed yoursunny
  • MannDudeMannDude Patron Provider, Veteran

    Don't let your customers to select their own root password at sign up, and modify your WHMCS email templates to not share the password via email. In the email template, include a link to your Knowledgebase that tells the customer how to manually set the root password or use a SSH key from your VPS control panel.

    This prevents their password from being logged in WHMCS and prevents it from being emailed in plain text, even if WHMCS randomly generates it.

    Five minutes later, a more secure setup.

  • @SmokyHosts said:

    @zed said:

    @SmokyHosts said:

    @hyperblast said:

    @SmokyHosts said:
    The customer will purchase a VPS/server from you and when you deploy the VPS/server and share the access details, they simply claim a refund saying that the access details were shared in plain text (mind it, its the access details of the VPS/server that were shared in plain text, while WHMCS by default hashes their WHMCS login passwords as per GDPR rules). If they had any sense, all they had to do was to change their VPS/server password and never share it with the host again!

    To make things worst, if you don't offer refund, they raise it to PayPal saying the product wasn't delivered, and no matter how much proof you share with PayPal, they simply say that they "advice" to deliver items by trackable courier companies, without even recognizing that it is a digital delivery and not a physical one!

    If anybody wants to know the full details of such a client, to be on the safe side, feel free to PM me. I will share the details of one such customer if you are a patron provider here.

    secure the initial posting!
    unbelievable! the provider wants to share customer data with other providers via pm.

    beware of @SmokyHosts

    Now that is over dramatizing the already lost case!

    Its about sharing the pattern of attack rather than sharing the PII details of the customer

    bro you quite literally typed "the full details of such a client", you can't backpedal when we can all just hit pageup.

    There is no backpedaling here when we are pretty much aware of regulations set around sharing PII data without user's consent. If it wasn't obvious, maybe my responses later should have clarified my intent.

    @SmokyHosts said: If anybody wants to know the full details of such a client, to be on the safe side, feel free to PM me. I will share the details of one such customer if you are a patron provider here.

    Anyway I get that this might be annoying but what's the fraud part? They sign up and pay and then change their mind and want a refund. Can you explain to a simpleton like me? I don't provide vps so I might be missing something obvious.

    edit: shit like this is why i disapprove of fraudrecord, customer wanted a refund report it as fraud!11

    To explain the fraud part... Promotional offers are offered keeping some calculations in mind. Every business is here to run sustainably and not to give away freebies and shut shop the next day. And such promotional offers come with some rules that need to be adhered to.

    The rule, very clearly written was that we do not offer refunds and/or trials on promotional offers. This was disregarded, by both, the customer as well as PayPal.

    And try explaining it to PayPal that server access details are not sent by snailmail!

    None of this is a reason to share access details in plain text or call it a fraud when a customer wins a legal chargeback request. And it's your fault in first place for not providing refunds to avoid disputes like this.

    Thanked by 2zed network
  • @zed said:

    @CloudHopper said: Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period

    Interesting plot twist, so essentially no provider can declare "no refunds" when dealing with a citizen of the EU. How is this enforceable though? Also, I'm moving to the EU hugs.

    PayPal is a breeze; don't know why people complain about it. Try SEPA, the customer can dispute a payment on a "no questions asked" basis for a period of 8 weeks. Bank will return his money and that's final, no appeals process or anything.

  • Can someone please explain what's wrong with sharing passwords in email in clear text? Are you that regarded to not change the password you got in the email? Are you special snowflake that you actually give provider your actual root password when you do reinstallation?

    You set your root password as "test". You get the email that server is ready, you login and change it to your real password. Then disable root login, Then create yourself new user and add ssh keys.

  • @hyperblast said:

    @zed said:

    @CloudHopper said: Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period

    Interesting plot twist, so essentially no provider can declare "no refunds" when dealing with a citizen of the EU. How is this enforceable though? Also, I'm moving to the EU hugs.

    EUdSSR - patronization at every turn

    I don't see a 14-day period as any problem for a normal business. Perhaps you are not aware how things were before that. Here's an example: A large leading telecom would call your half-deaf and senile grandmother and talk her into upgrading her plan to some subscription plan she does not even need. Why did she do it? Because they told her it will be "cheaper" and "better".

  • timmmytimmmy Member

    now i wonder if this provider did this same shit before and share details with other people whenever shit happens between them and their customers

  • zedzed Member

    @barbaros said: You set your root password as "test". You get the email that server is ready, you login and change it to your real password. Then disable root login, Then create yourself new user and add ssh keys.

    When I get the email I actually login the cp and turn it off until I have time to reinstall from iso and run my config tooling. Ask me about providers that boot vps that were explicitly turned off when they reboot the host, annoying.

  • @barbaros said:
    Can someone please explain what's wrong with sharing passwords in email in clear text? Are you that regarded to not change the password you got in the email?

    Because even assuming you won the world championship because you're very fast at changing your password; by that time your server is already compromised.

  • @maxxxxx said:

    @barbaros said:
    Can someone please explain what's wrong with sharing passwords in email in clear text? Are you that regarded to not change the password you got in the email?

    Because even assuming you won the world championship because you're very fast at changing your password; by that time your server is already compromised.

    How? That is only possible if there is any MITM attack. And if they can do it, they can simply change your password and reach your server from your hosting's panel.

  • I guess it is possible if hackers use password lists and they are fast enough to probe it on your server and quickly change it. Such scenario seems rare to me unless you leave your server idle for long periods.

  • @NeedDeal said:
    Why the fuck do you send password in plain text? It can be intercepted and your vps could be taken over and who knows what junk my be put on it.
    You on crack op?:) you wanted to share client detail then got called over

    I never trust a single password given to me. As soon as I am in, I set my own password. And OP said they would share the pattern details, not PII details.
    Not sure even if this constitutes as fraud or a scam. If a customer is a special little PITA flake, refund them and restrict their account. Ain't nobody got time for their crap.

    Asking for a friend, are you the client who purchased a VPS from OP and had a conniption when you saw the password in plain text?

    Thanked by 1SmokyHosts
  • He mentioned in the thread that he shares the full details of the client.
    What fraud and what scam are you talking about.

  • lirrrlirrr Member

    this thread made me realize how egg tart people are

  • @zed said:

    @barbaros said: You set your root password as "test". You get the email that server is ready, you login and change it to your real password. Then disable root login, Then create yourself new user and add ssh keys.

    When I get the email I actually login the cp and turn it off until I have time to reinstall from iso and run my config tooling. Ask me about providers that boot vps that were explicitly turned off when they reboot the host, annoying.

    This shouldn't be allowed as it does not equate to idling!

  • yoursunnyyoursunny Member, IPv6 Advocate

    Next time send VPS password by Priority Mail.
    You then have a tracking number to supply PayPal.

  • yoursunnyyoursunny Member, IPv6 Advocate

    @maxxxxx said:

    @barbaros said:
    Can someone please explain what's wrong with sharing passwords in email in clear text? Are you that regarded to not change the password you got in the email?

    Because even assuming you won the world championship because you're very fast at changing your password; by that time your server is already compromised.

    Yes, someone hacked into our newly purchased @Hosteroid VPS to run port scans within a hour of delivery, before we had a chance to reinstall.
    We had to respond to an angry abuse notice.

    All newly purchased VPS should be delivered without an operating system and in powered off state.

    @zed said:
    When I get the email I actually login the cp and turn it off until I have time to reinstall from iso and run my config tooling. Ask me about providers that boot vps that were explicitly turned off when they reboot the host, annoying.

    @tomazu once migrated our machine to a different host and automatically booted the machine.
    It entered a boot loop due to PCI address changed in several virtualized hardware devices, and triggered the CPU abuse script.

  • kuroitkuroit Member, Host Rep, Megathread Squad

    @CloudHopper said:

    @SmokyHosts said:

    @CloudHopper said:
    What happens if you just give the customer the refund and immediately cancel the VPS? Wouldn't that count as a refund rather than fraud, or have I misunderstood something?

    The point being that as per the promotional offer rules, we had already clearly mentioned that we do not offer trials or refunds.

    If it would have been a non-promotional offer, we would have even considered refunding at the first sense of such fraud, as its better to let go off such customers than bear them in the long run.

    In the European Union, customers automatically get a 14 day "cooling off period" where they are free to cancel contracts for digital services and request a refund "without justification". This applies to EU citizens, regardless of the location of the provider, similar to GDPR requirements.

    Source: https://europa.eu/youreurope/citizens/consumers/shopping/guarantees-returns/index_en.htm

    Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period

    "If you buy a product or service online, by phone or from a seller at your doorstep (in legal terms a “distance contract” or “off-premises contract”) you have the right to withdraw. This means you can cancel the contract within 14 days without providing any justification (the "cooling-off period"). For goods this means 14 days from the date of delivery, for services 14 days after the day the contract was agreed. If the cooling-off period expires on a non-working day, your deadline is extended until the next working day."

    A client from UK sent us legal notice about a year ago stating that exact clause after us winning the dispute with American Express CC as we have only 3 days refund policy. We still won, and never refunded anything.

    This is right below the "Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period":

    Exceptions
    Please note: the 14-day cooling-off period does not apply to:

    plane and train tickets, as well as concert tickets, hotel bookings, car rental reservations and catering services for specific dates
    perishable goods that expire rapidly, such as food or drinks with a short “use by” date
    goods made to order or clearly personalised – such as a tailor-made suit
    goods or services with fluctuating prices following global markets, such as household heating fuel
    fully delivered services, such as cleaning a terrace, if you expressly agreed to start immediately acknowledging you would lose the right of withdrawal
    sealed audio, video or computer software, such as DVDs, that you have unsealed
    online digital content, such as a song or movie, that you started downloading or streaming after you expressly agreed to lose your right of withdrawal by starting the performance
    urgent repairs and maintenance contracts, such as inviting a plumber to repair a leaking shower

    ^ It all depends on how you represent your side of the case. :)
    Dont use any emotional speech with any payment processor or financial institutions, just spit facts and they will most likely lick lol.

  • maxxxxxmaxxxxx Member
    edited July 2025

    @barbaros said:

    @maxxxxx said:

    @barbaros said:
    Can someone please explain what's wrong with sharing passwords in email in clear text? Are you that regarded to not change the password you got in the email?

    Because even assuming you won the world championship because you're very fast at changing your password; by that time your server is already compromised.

    How? That is only possible if there is any MITM attack. And if they can do it, they can simply change your password and reach your server from your hosting's panel.

    Every email can pass through a dozen or even more hops/servers/systems. There's no guarantee for all of them to be encrypted in transit or at rest. Every system the email goes through increases the risks substantially; risks of there being a rogue employee or one of those system already being hacked, etc.

    @yoursunny already mentioned it happening in practice. But if the hackers are a bit more smarter and sofisticated they will compromise your system without triggering abuse notices and just sit there without you having a clue about it.

    @yoursunny said:
    Next time send VPS password by Priority Mail.
    You then have a tracking number to supply PayPal.

    It is actually explained on PayPal website how to prove the delivery of intangible goods:

    For intangible or digital goods, proof of shipment or delivery means compelling evidence to show the item was delivered or the purchase order was fulfilled. Compelling evidence could include a system of record showing the date the item was sent and that it was either:

    • Electronically sent to the recipient, including the recipient’s address (email, IP, etc.), where applicable; or
    • Received or accessed by the recipient

    Just a matter of setting up your system to be able to provide such evidence.

    Thanked by 1yoursunny
  • @kuroit said:

    @CloudHopper said:

    @SmokyHosts said:

    @CloudHopper said:
    What happens if you just give the customer the refund and immediately cancel the VPS? Wouldn't that count as a refund rather than fraud, or have I misunderstood something?

    The point being that as per the promotional offer rules, we had already clearly mentioned that we do not offer trials or refunds.

    If it would have been a non-promotional offer, we would have even considered refunding at the first sense of such fraud, as its better to let go off such customers than bear them in the long run.

    In the European Union, customers automatically get a 14 day "cooling off period" where they are free to cancel contracts for digital services and request a refund "without justification". This applies to EU citizens, regardless of the location of the provider, similar to GDPR requirements.

    Source: https://europa.eu/youreurope/citizens/consumers/shopping/guarantees-returns/index_en.htm

    Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period

    "If you buy a product or service online, by phone or from a seller at your doorstep (in legal terms a “distance contract” or “off-premises contract”) you have the right to withdraw. This means you can cancel the contract within 14 days without providing any justification (the "cooling-off period"). For goods this means 14 days from the date of delivery, for services 14 days after the day the contract was agreed. If the cooling-off period expires on a non-working day, your deadline is extended until the next working day."

    A client from UK sent us legal notice about a year ago stating that exact clause after us winning the dispute with American Express CC as we have only 3 days refund policy. We still won, and never refunded anything.

    This is right below the "Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period":

    Exceptions
    Please note: the 14-day cooling-off period does not apply to:

    plane and train tickets, as well as concert tickets, hotel bookings, car rental reservations and catering services for specific dates
    perishable goods that expire rapidly, such as food or drinks with a short “use by” date
    goods made to order or clearly personalised – such as a tailor-made suit
    goods or services with fluctuating prices following global markets, such as household heating fuel
    fully delivered services, such as cleaning a terrace, if you expressly agreed to start immediately acknowledging you would lose the right of withdrawal
    sealed audio, video or computer software, such as DVDs, that you have unsealed
    online digital content, such as a song or movie, that you started downloading or streaming after you expressly agreed to lose your right of withdrawal by starting the performance
    urgent repairs and maintenance contracts, such as inviting a plumber to repair a leaking shower

    ^ It all depends on how you represent your side of the case. :)
    Dont use any emotional speech with any payment processor or financial institutions, just spit facts and they will most likely lick lol.

    is teh uk in teh eu?

  • kuroitkuroit Member, Host Rep, Megathread Squad

    @hyperblast said:

    @kuroit said:

    @CloudHopper said:

    @SmokyHosts said:

    @CloudHopper said:
    What happens if you just give the customer the refund and immediately cancel the VPS? Wouldn't that count as a refund rather than fraud, or have I misunderstood something?

    The point being that as per the promotional offer rules, we had already clearly mentioned that we do not offer trials or refunds.

    If it would have been a non-promotional offer, we would have even considered refunding at the first sense of such fraud, as its better to let go off such customers than bear them in the long run.

    In the European Union, customers automatically get a 14 day "cooling off period" where they are free to cancel contracts for digital services and request a refund "without justification". This applies to EU citizens, regardless of the location of the provider, similar to GDPR requirements.

    Source: https://europa.eu/youreurope/citizens/consumers/shopping/guarantees-returns/index_en.htm

    Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period

    "If you buy a product or service online, by phone or from a seller at your doorstep (in legal terms a “distance contract” or “off-premises contract”) you have the right to withdraw. This means you can cancel the contract within 14 days without providing any justification (the "cooling-off period"). For goods this means 14 days from the date of delivery, for services 14 days after the day the contract was agreed. If the cooling-off period expires on a non-working day, your deadline is extended until the next working day."

    A client from UK sent us legal notice about a year ago stating that exact clause after us winning the dispute with American Express CC as we have only 3 days refund policy. We still won, and never refunded anything.

    This is right below the "Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period":

    Exceptions
    Please note: the 14-day cooling-off period does not apply to:

    plane and train tickets, as well as concert tickets, hotel bookings, car rental reservations and catering services for specific dates
    perishable goods that expire rapidly, such as food or drinks with a short “use by” date
    goods made to order or clearly personalised – such as a tailor-made suit
    goods or services with fluctuating prices following global markets, such as household heating fuel
    fully delivered services, such as cleaning a terrace, if you expressly agreed to start immediately acknowledging you would lose the right of withdrawal
    sealed audio, video or computer software, such as DVDs, that you have unsealed
    online digital content, such as a song or movie, that you started downloading or streaming after you expressly agreed to lose your right of withdrawal by starting the performance
    urgent repairs and maintenance contracts, such as inviting a plumber to repair a leaking shower

    ^ It all depends on how you represent your side of the case. :)
    Dont use any emotional speech with any payment processor or financial institutions, just spit facts and they will most likely lick lol.

    is teh uk in teh eu?

    No wonder our politicians and monarchs be like:

    Try searching: UK GDPR

    Thanked by 1SmokyHosts
  • @SmokyHosts said:

    @CloudHopper said:

    @SmokyHosts said:

    @CloudHopper said:
    What happens if you just give the customer the refund and immediately cancel the VPS? Wouldn't that count as a refund rather than fraud, or have I misunderstood something?

    The point being that as per the promotional offer rules, we had already clearly mentioned that we do not offer trials or refunds.

    If it would have been a non-promotional offer, we would have even considered refunding at the first sense of such fraud, as its better to let go off such customers than bear them in the long run.

    In the European Union, customers automatically get a 14 day "cooling off period" where they are free to cancel contracts for digital services and request a refund "without justification". This applies to EU citizens, regardless of the location of the provider, similar to GDPR requirements.

    Source: https://europa.eu/youreurope/citizens/consumers/shopping/guarantees-returns/index_en.htm

    Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period

    "If you buy a product or service online, by phone or from a seller at your doorstep (in legal terms a “distance contract” or “off-premises contract”) you have the right to withdraw. This means you can cancel the contract within 14 days without providing any justification (the "cooling-off period"). For goods this means 14 days from the date of delivery, for services 14 days after the day the contract was agreed. If the cooling-off period expires on a non-working day, your deadline is extended until the next working day."

    Thanks for the clarification. So the onus is back on the provider rather than on the customer, no matter the terms mentioned

    Correct. If the terms applied by the Provider conflict with the rights prescribed by law in the European Union then they aren't applicable/enforceable there. Also, EU consumer protection is ruthless because disputes are relatively unambiguous, (compared to GDPR), and they're generally very trigger happy.

  • @zed said:

    @CloudHopper said: Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period

    Interesting plot twist, so essentially no provider can declare "no refunds" when dealing with a citizen of the EU. How is this enforceable though? Also, I'm moving to the EU hugs.

    Correct. Sucks to be a Provider. Great to be a consumer. But the EU is mental, evil and whatever other weird shit that the "too online" crowd dramatize about.

    Thanked by 2zed SmokyHosts
  • @kuroit said:

    @CloudHopper said:

    @SmokyHosts said:

    @CloudHopper said:
    What happens if you just give the customer the refund and immediately cancel the VPS? Wouldn't that count as a refund rather than fraud, or have I misunderstood something?

    The point being that as per the promotional offer rules, we had already clearly mentioned that we do not offer trials or refunds.

    If it would have been a non-promotional offer, we would have even considered refunding at the first sense of such fraud, as its better to let go off such customers than bear them in the long run.

    In the European Union, customers automatically get a 14 day "cooling off period" where they are free to cancel contracts for digital services and request a refund "without justification". This applies to EU citizens, regardless of the location of the provider, similar to GDPR requirements.

    Source: https://europa.eu/youreurope/citizens/consumers/shopping/guarantees-returns/index_en.htm

    Right of withdrawal: a 14-day cooling-off period

    "If you buy a product or service online, by phone or from a seller at your doorstep (in legal terms a “distance contract” or “off-premises contract”) you have the right to withdraw. This means you can cancel the contract within 14 days without providing any justification (the "cooling-off period"). For goods this means 14 days from the date of delivery, for services 14 days after the day the contract was agreed. If the cooling-off period expires on a non-working day, your deadline is extended until the next working day."

    A client from UK sent us legal notice about a year ago stating that exact clause after us winning the dispute with American Express CC as we have only 3 days refund policy. We still won, and never refunded anything.

    The UK isn't in the EU, and hasn't been for a few years now, but unless the client complains to the appropriate EU consumer authority, (they have one per country and they vary in their ferocity), you don't have to worry. But EU citizens reading this might want to Google their national Consumer Protection organization because they can create a LOT more drama than PayPal dispute if you're so inclined....

  • raindog308raindog308 Administrator, Veteran

    @maxxxxx said: Because even assuming you won the world championship because you're very fast at changing your password; by that time your server is already compromised.

    Oh bullshit.

    In 20-odd years of using VPSes, I've never once had a VPS compromised by someone grabbing a plain text out of my email. Even when I've ordered one and not come back to set it up for months. Sending passwords by email is extremely common.

    I'm not saying it's a good practice. I agree with @MannDude that users providing SSH keys is definitely the way to go and I do that whenever possible, but the idea that everyone's systems are being compromised within seconds of a password being emailed is nonsense.

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