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Unexpected VPS Reinstallation after Requesting CPU Host Passthrough (SolidVPS)

135

Comments

  • @barbaros said:

    @allthemtings said:
    How can i get untagged from a quote btw

    By getting tagged in a new quote?

    ohhh

  • @6wvy5ipw said:
    @SolidVPS

    My screenshots clearly show I paid at 11/06/2025 23:31.

    So why did your system act like I paid again at 11/07/2025 04:49? That’s on your side.

    Shouldn’t there be some kind of public apology and a fix for this bug?
    Have you thought about restoring my service?

    Stupid fuck, that's when you paid, payments don't always arrive at the recipient in real time.

    So Solid may have gotten a notification that a payment was made, but there could be a delay before they get confirmation of funds.

    Is this your first credit card? The fact that you're ignoring the response is why people are so annoyed with you. Fucking acting deaf.

  • @6wvy5ipw said:

    As a responsible white-hat hacker, I report bugs immediately

    their impatience left me no choice but to share this publicly.

    To be honest, I think you're the one being impatient here. You've ordered the VPS less than 24 hours ago, so everything happened within 24 hours. You declare yourself a "responsibe white-hat hacker", act like one.

    Thanked by 1itoshikimonset
  • Flagged, please close this thread
    I request others to also flag, so the mods can see how the community feels.

  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    Thanked by 1nghialele
  • @TimboJones said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:
    @SolidVPS

    My screenshots clearly show I paid at 11/06/2025 23:31.

    So why did your system act like I paid again at 11/07/2025 04:49? That’s on your side.

    Shouldn’t there be some kind of public apology and a fix for this bug?
    Have you thought about restoring my service?

    Stupid fuck, that's when you paid, payments don't always arrive at the recipient in real time.

    So Solid may have gotten a notification that a payment was made, but there could be a delay before they get confirmation of funds.

    Is this your first credit card? The fact that you're ignoring the response is why people are so annoyed with you. Fucking acting deaf.

    I currently have 30+ VPS from different providers, some of them for years.
    Never — not once — have I seen a VPS get auto-reprovisioned without any action from the user.

    This isn’t “payment delay”, it’s a system issue.
    And just because you may be new to this doesn’t mean everyone else is.

  • @agile said:
    Looks like yet another “MJJ”. After purchasing the server, they ran all sorts of scripts, tested various networks and ping times, only to find it didn't meet their “jailbreak” requirements. They then initiated a refund request using a disposable email address, with payment details potentially mismatching their PayPal account. All personal information was fabricated. They're always like this – swarming like locusts, inventing countless excuses to demand refunds.

    My goal was to get the bug fixed, not a refund. I never asked for one.
    I even provided screenshots as evidence, but the provider ignored them and just refunded me.
    Where did you get the idea that I wanted a refund? Do you always assume things like that?

  • MumblyMumbly Member
    edited November 2025

    @TimboJones said: Stupid fuck, that's when you paid, payments don't always arrive at the recipient in real time.

    So Solid may have gotten a notification that a payment was made, but there could be a delay before they get confirmation of funds.

    Exactly, but that just means that the client's, or we can say ex-client's, claim was correct.

    It seems like he paid, the payment went through, the system got payment notification, the VPS was created, but for some reason, the host hasn't seen the payment yet, so they terminated the VPS. How is this the client's fault?

    @SolidVPS said: The order was accidentally deployed before payment, was subsequently triggered and terminated, and later redeployed after payment was received. We have explained this to the client multiple times via support tickets.

    But you were wrong multiple times if that's the case, as he obviously paid and your system got a notification about it and provisioned the VPS. The deployment wasn't accidental, not just like that, you just haven’t seen the payment yet.

    Thanked by 1itachikonoha
  • @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    Btw... In a perfect world yes. All clients are treated equally... In reality, if you spend 10K with me I will give you some priority over a $15 loss leader... Just saying.

  • @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

    As you can see in the thread, the provider has been insisting that the VPS was initially unpaid and was only reset after the payment went through. In reality, that’s not the case. They’ve consistently ignored what I’ve pointed out—perhaps they’ve been overwhelmed by too many spammy orders? I don’t think this issue is hard to investigate; it could probably be resolved just by checking the PayPal backend.

    Thanked by 1Saragoldfarb
  • @Saragoldfarb said:
    Btw... In a perfect world yes. All clients are treated equally... In reality, if you spend 10K with me I will give you some priority over a $15 loss leader... Just saying.

    Haha, I’m pretty sure bugs don’t care whether it’s a $15 VPS or a $10K one.

  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

    As you can see in the thread, the provider has been insisting that the VPS was initially unpaid and was only reset after the payment went through. In reality, that’s not the case. They’ve consistently ignored what I’ve pointed out—perhaps they’ve been overwhelmed by too many spammy orders? I don’t think this issue is hard to investigate; it could probably be resolved just by checking the PayPal backend.

    Timestamps don't mean shit. Just because PP said payment was made doesn't mean the host got the payment at the same time.

    Look, there could be multiple things that went wrong. No biggie.

    You seem to be eager to drag this on so indulge us and post your support tickets.

  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:
    Btw... In a perfect world yes. All clients are treated equally... In reality, if you spend 10K with me I will give you some priority over a $15 loss leader... Just saying.

    Haha, I’m pretty sure bugs don’t care whether it’s a $15 VPS or a $10K one.

    Trust me, they do.

  • At the end i believe everyone already know that the provider "possibly" as a bug on the system.
    Of course this should be taken first into DMs or Ticket. I think that the provider had the right to cancel the service/account and refund.

    I hope there was some learning involved with this case.
    Also flagging to close!

  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    Me: hey what going on? My vm got reprovisioned.

    Host: yeah sorry about that. Payment wasn't confirmed and we needed to do some checks, it was automatically reprovisioned. Sorry about that.

    Me: ok, thanks for clearing that up.

    We live happily ever after.

  • @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

    As you can see in the thread, the provider has been insisting that the VPS was initially unpaid and was only reset after the payment went through. In reality, that’s not the case. They’ve consistently ignored what I’ve pointed out—perhaps they’ve been overwhelmed by too many spammy orders? I don’t think this issue is hard to investigate; it could probably be resolved just by checking the PayPal backend.

    Timestamps don't mean shit. Just because PP said payment was made doesn't mean the host got the payment at the same time.

    Look, there could be multiple things that went wrong. No biggie.

    You seem to be eager to drag this on so indulge us and post your support tickets.

    I can't login, i can't see my ticket

    Thanked by 1Saragoldfarb
  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

    As you can see in the thread, the provider has been insisting that the VPS was initially unpaid and was only reset after the payment went through. In reality, that’s not the case. They’ve consistently ignored what I’ve pointed out—perhaps they’ve been overwhelmed by too many spammy orders? I don’t think this issue is hard to investigate; it could probably be resolved just by checking the PayPal backend.

    Timestamps don't mean shit. Just because PP said payment was made doesn't mean the host got the payment at the same time.

    Look, there could be multiple things that went wrong. No biggie.

    You seem to be eager to drag this on so indulge us and post your support tickets.

    I can't login, i can't see my ticket

    Email?

  • @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @CoolGeek said:
    At this point in the thread, it certainly seems like OP was right (and I don't read the initial post as a complaint. He clearly says "maybe it helps someone or someone has seen something similar" and is far from outraged about it).

    The PayPal receipt matching is very convincing, too. The whole "cancel and refund"/post here seems a little extreme.

    So, while a lot of people are "OP was ____" and "provider was ____", I think it's important to note that an opinion about OP has no real consequences, but providers' responses to situation like this matter. SolidVPS's comments here are giving me pause about purchasing because, in my opinion, OP clearly paid, it was deployed, and then something went wrong.

    Whatever went wrong, the best course would've been to apologize and say "we'll investigate it" or something like that... and again, I don't think this post was trashing SolidVPS. It was just saying "heads up, this happened to me".

    Yeh but from what I read they did make a 'mistake' (debatable though, op timestamp issues, timeline issues and more not going into that, but I'll give him that) and here's the thing.... he endlessly bugged them about it so they decided it's better to part.

    It's an attitude thing. Host Lives Matter. Don't be a dick and 99.999% of the time you'll be fine.

    The way Solid handled this is perfectly fine in my book. Straight to the point, no BS.

    Can't run a business when you have Mjjs giving you unjustified shit over a $15/y promo.

    That's the kind of clients you don't want, and all for the better. Your 'serious' clients will appreciate you for that.

    I don’t think this has anything to do with how much the bill was.
    This bug happened on my $15/year VPS, but it could just as easily happen on someone’s $10,000/year server.
    A bug is a bug — it can cause data loss.

    In my case, the VPS was automatically reset five hours after payment, without me doing anything. If I didn’t report it and the provider didn’t fix it, what happens when this bug triggers after two weeks or three months? Someone could be running production workloads, and suddenly everything gets wiped.

    I reported this because it’s serious. That’s called being responsible.

    Yeah, it's obvious a glitch which would not be a big deal for about 99.999% of users. Reporting it is fine, what happens after and the way things are worded is another thing.

    I don't see those transcripts so...

    As you can see in the thread, the provider has been insisting that the VPS was initially unpaid and was only reset after the payment went through. In reality, that’s not the case. They’ve consistently ignored what I’ve pointed out—perhaps they’ve been overwhelmed by too many spammy orders? I don’t think this issue is hard to investigate; it could probably be resolved just by checking the PayPal backend.

    Timestamps don't mean shit. Just because PP said payment was made doesn't mean the host got the payment at the same time.

    Look, there could be multiple things that went wrong. No biggie.

    You seem to be eager to drag this on so indulge us and post your support tickets.

    I can't login, i can't see my ticket

    Email?

    Not have the full on email, only can see he's reply

    Thanked by 1Saragoldfarb
  • @Saragoldfarb said:
    Me: hey what going on? My vm got reprovisioned.

    Host: yeah sorry about that. Payment wasn't confirmed and we needed to do some checks, it was automatically reprovisioned. Sorry about that.

    Me: ok, thanks for clearing that up.

    We live happily ever after.

    @Saragoldfarb said:
    Me: hey what going on? My vm got reprovisioned.

    Host: yeah sorry about that. Payment wasn't confirmed and we needed to do some checks, it was automatically reprovisioned. Sorry about that.

    Me: ok, thanks for clearing that up.

    We live happily ever after.

    The provider didn’t actually show any real apology, nor did they investigate the exact issue. They kept insisting that the reset of my VPS was normal. How would you handle it if you ran into something like this?

    Thanked by 1Saragoldfarb
  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:
    Me: hey what going on? My vm got reprovisioned.

    Host: yeah sorry about that. Payment wasn't confirmed and we needed to do some checks, it was automatically reprovisioned. Sorry about that.

    Me: ok, thanks for clearing that up.

    We live happily ever after.

    @Saragoldfarb said:
    Me: hey what going on? My vm got reprovisioned.

    Host: yeah sorry about that. Payment wasn't confirmed and we needed to do some checks, it was automatically reprovisioned. Sorry about that.

    Me: ok, thanks for clearing that up.

    We live happily ever after.

    The provider didn’t actually show any real apology, nor did they investigate the exact issue. They kept insisting that the reset of my VPS was normal. How would you handle it if you ran into something like this?

    Depends on the clients attitude towards the issue. Depends on what he's paying. Is he new, is he a returning client.

    Generally hosts welcome any business. When they choose to part ways that never is their preferred outcome (bar some nuggets type hosts).

    By deduction there has to be something that! triggered your parting. Imo, host explained clearly why they decided to part.

  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad
    edited November 2025

    Also, you make a claim. If you want to support a claim and want to drag it out. Make sure you have documented proof.

    So far, I just see a payment screenshot and a backup screenshot. Not much to work with.

    when you make a claim, providing the proof is on you.

  • @barbaros said:
    Hello @SolidVPS, I heard similar things from @oloke and @emgh also. Can you please terminate their servers also? You can DM @allthemtings for confirmation before terminating their servers.

    Keep being the best!

    Edit: I was just shitposting, wasn't expecting a serious answer :D

    Your ticket has been doubled! Thank you for your business!

  • nghialelenghialele Member
    edited November 2025

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @hennaboy said:
    Why are you still banging on about it. You got the explanation. You have been refunded.

    What else are you expecting from carrying on.

    I just want to report this bug. So?

    Bro the button on LET called "New Discussion" not "Bug Report"

    Thanked by 1Saragoldfarb
  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    @nghialele said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @hennaboy said:
    Why are you still banging on about it. You got the explanation. You have been refunded.

    What else are you expecting from carrying on.

    I just want to report this bug. So?

    Bro the button on LET called "New Discussion" not "Bug Report"

  • @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:
    Me: hey what going on? My vm got reprovisioned.

    Host: yeah sorry about that. Payment wasn't confirmed and we needed to do some checks, it was automatically reprovisioned. Sorry about that.

    Me: ok, thanks for clearing that up.

    We live happily ever after.

    @Saragoldfarb said:
    Me: hey what going on? My vm got reprovisioned.

    Host: yeah sorry about that. Payment wasn't confirmed and we needed to do some checks, it was automatically reprovisioned. Sorry about that.

    Me: ok, thanks for clearing that up.

    We live happily ever after.

    The provider didn’t actually show any real apology, nor did they investigate the exact issue. They kept insisting that the reset of my VPS was normal. How would you handle it if you ran into something like this?

    Depends on the clients attitude towards the issue. Depends on what he's paying. Is he new, is he a returning client.

    Generally hosts welcome any business. When they choose to part ways that never is their preferred outcome (bar some nuggets type hosts).

    By deduction there has to be something that! triggered your parting. Imo, host explained clearly why they decided to part.

    In my view, this provider is both technically incompetent and has a bad attitude. They couldn’t even figure out such a simple case and went ahead and terminated my account. For them, user data is basically worthless. Solving the problem clearly isn’t important—they just want me to shut up: “Fine, you got your refund, now go away.”

  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:
    Me: hey what going on? My vm got reprovisioned.

    Host: yeah sorry about that. Payment wasn't confirmed and we needed to do some checks, it was automatically reprovisioned. Sorry about that.

    Me: ok, thanks for clearing that up.

    We live happily ever after.

    @Saragoldfarb said:
    Me: hey what going on? My vm got reprovisioned.

    Host: yeah sorry about that. Payment wasn't confirmed and we needed to do some checks, it was automatically reprovisioned. Sorry about that.

    Me: ok, thanks for clearing that up.

    We live happily ever after.

    The provider didn’t actually show any real apology, nor did they investigate the exact issue. They kept insisting that the reset of my VPS was normal. How would you handle it if you ran into something like this?

    Depends on the clients attitude towards the issue. Depends on what he's paying. Is he new, is he a returning client.

    Generally hosts welcome any business. When they choose to part ways that never is their preferred outcome (bar some nuggets type hosts).

    By deduction there has to be something that! triggered your parting. Imo, host explained clearly why they decided to part.

    In my view, this provider is both technically incompetent and has a bad attitude. They couldn’t even figure out such a simple case and went ahead and terminated my account. For them, user data is basically worthless. Solving the problem clearly isn’t important—they just want me to shut up: “Fine, you got your refund, now go away.”

    You're entitled to your opinion. Would be nice to be able to back that up as those are bold claims.

  • @Saragoldfarb said:
    Also, you make a claim. If you want to support a claim and want to drag it out. Make sure you have documented proof.

    So far, I just see a payment screenshot and a backup screenshot. Not much to work with.

    when you make a claim, providing the proof is on you.

    hA7tGNnucUKUziG2PudqQPddmVGbSRxW.webp
    PY4VkEZfehV6P6mUT9vYIacKWbnhY8hu.webp

    At UTC+8 12:40, I logged into this server and took a screenshot, which I shared on my TG: https://t.me/lowend_offer/1159

  • @cybertech said:
    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @SolidVPS said:

    @6wvy5ipw said:

    @SolidVPS said:
    Hi,

    There was no “wrong button” pressed. The order was accidentally deployed before payment, was subsequently triggered and terminated, and later redeployed after payment was received. We have explained this to the client multiple times via support tickets.

    However, since we do not encourage this type of behavior, we will go ahead and refund the order and terminate it. In general, we prefer not to retain clients who act in this manner, especially when the situation has been clearly clarified multiple times.

    @6wvy5ipw I have processed your refund and this server will be terminated in the next 3 hours so please make sure to take all necessary backup

    I had told you ,

    11/06/2025 23:31 — Welcome To Solid - Your Linux Cloud VPS is Now Ready!
    ⇢ I paid for the order, and the system was deployed at that time.

    11/07/2025 04:49 — Welcome To Solid - Your Linux Cloud VPS is Now Ready!
    ⇢ For some unknown reason, my system was redeployed.

    Your system has a bug , your system think I paid on 11/07/2025 04:49,

    I can provide all of screenshot for my payment.

    You have been refunded in full. Since you mentioned here that there is no data on the server and the refund has been processed, we will proceed to terminate it.

    We wish you all the best

    Thanks for the refund.

    However, based on what happened, I want to clarify my concern:

    So your system can unexpectedly redeploy a VPS without user confirmation, causing potential data loss. Instead of investigating the bug or explaining what happened, the solution was simply to terminate my service after I reported it.

    It feels like:

    “We can't fix the problem, but we can remove the person who reported it.”

    For me, this isn’t about the money — it's about reliability and transparency. If a system action can delete snapshots or reinstall without user confirmation, that’s a serious issue for anyone who has real data on the server.

    its precisely because of individuals like you that some providers are reluctant to go lowend on prices to not attract ghetto behavior.

    with the refund Solidvps killed 3 birds with one stone by protecting his support resource, maintaining his flash deals and weeding out whiners.

    I'll definitely be getting something from him soon.

    “Ghetto behavior”? Seriously?
    Reporting a bug that wipes a VPS is now considered bad manners?
    That’s some wild logic, man.
    A provider nukes someone’s server without warning, and you’re out here defending it like that’s normal.
    Maybe check your standards before throwing labels around.

This discussion has been closed.