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Velox media under new management

15657596162184

Comments

  • ralfralf Member

    @hennaboy said:
    It's about as far away as an exit scam as you can get.

    For sure plans will be axed and reviewed but everything they are doing points to the new owners providing the services. As much as that may annoy people who wish them to tank.

    Again, except for the part where Eric said that he plans to drop all the customers he decides aren't worth keeping, and explicitly said that all the LET plans fell into that bracket.

    I don't use Discord, so I might have missed it, but AFAIK he hasn't contradicted that yet by making a statement that he will honour every contract to their expiry date. If he did that, then the biggest red flag will be gone. But until he makes a statement to that effect, one has to believe his original statement still represents his true intentions.

    Thanked by 3tof Saragoldfarb Marx
  • rpqurpqu Member

    @hennaboy said:

    @Calypso said:

    @hennaboy said:

    He is clearly getting more and more upset that the exit scam isnt actually happening.

    Nope. I don't care about the money. So that isn't a factor. What I'm more upset about that apparantly it's not allowed on this forum (Commonly a forum is a place to share ideas, opinions and experiences) to have a different opinion or way to look at things.

    Apparantly also it's going along with the US way of thinking: either you're with us or against us. Being in between isn't an option.

    My comment is about a thought process - we are all looking at things without knowing the details. Everyone, including people who are very determined in their thinking, is making assumptions. Simply because we don't know details. We don't even know if there is a real "Lewis" and/or "Eric" or whatever.

    And if I just mention a fact (yes, a real fact, they still exist these days) that my VPS is still up and running and doesn't have an issue, I'm put into a corner of "promoting VeloxMedia".

    I wasnt referring to you. I was referring to JasonM

    Sorry for the confusion.

    People can believe what they want but when they are posting things like

    Veloxmedia now has 4 servers temporarily deployed there, 4 servers temporarily deployed in OH2 while we build our separate infrastructure 8+ server in a new location for you guys. Hope to have the agreement signed next week and we're building the equipment now so its ready to go as soon as they have the rack prepped for us and our IPs assigned.
    We're also clearing a 2PB storage array for the new DC

    It's about as far away as an exit scam as you can get.

    For sure plans will be axed and reviewed but everything they are doing points to the new owners providing the services. As much as that may annoy people who wish them to tank.

    > Old owner gone with the money and contract
    > New owner get new infra
    > "Guys, it's not an exit scam"
    Where's Lewis Edwards?

    Thanked by 1barbarza
  • defaultdefault Veteran

    @ralf said:

    @hennaboy said:
    It's about as far away as an exit scam as you can get.

    For sure plans will be axed and reviewed but everything they are doing points to the new owners providing the services. As much as that may annoy people who wish them to tank.

    Again, except for the part where Eric said that he plans to drop all the customers he decides aren't worth keeping, and explicitly said that all the LET plans fell into that bracket.

    Not keeping the some unsustainable services is quite correct, but announcement needs to be done and the services need to be honoured on the remaining period which was paid for. In my opinion, these should be marked for cancellation as soon as possible, until the end of their billing period, so the customers become aware that their services will be terminated automatically at the end of billing period.

  • @hennaboy said:
    I wasnt referring to you. I was referring to JasonM

    Sorry for the confusion.

    Thanks for clearing it up

  • edited January 4

    @JasonM said:

    @forest said: The problem is cancelling services without refund. Sure, he's still keeping my server up so I have no reason to chargeback (not that I could after paying with cryptocurrency, anyway) or to take legal action, but he has terminated, without refund, the services of others.

    the reason Velox Media's customer to chargeback is simple and important one:
    1. User bought and paid for server to Lewis. Not VeloxMedia or Eric (new owner)
    2. Eric is allowing to run your server host with Velox Media at his sole discretion.
    3. Eric did not receive fund/revenue in his own account for your server. He is technically giving it for free as long as he can and thus he can suspend/terminate it at his own will. There is no legal or even any written contract/agreement between Eric/Velox Media, LLC and user.
    4. The future invoice after your service expiry date will be generated through Eric/Velox Media and then user and Velox will be officially under the contract of providing services.
    5. If you are a user who bought VPS on monthly basis and has renewed it then chances are its now legal contract you paid to Eric.
    6. If you are a user who bought annual/2yr/3yr server plan then you've paid Lewis, and not Eric/Velox Media, LLC and so Eric has no obligation to keep your server ON for 3 years. That's the main reason to chargeback, beyond there were reasons like lots of downtime as mentioned by other users.

    None of this is a legal reason for a chargeback. You're allowed to request a chargeback in the following circumstances:

    1. Unauthorized transaction
    2. Good or service was not delivered (i.e. scam)

    END OF STORY. If you willingly paid for something, you received what you paid for, and you request a chargeback anyway, that makes YOU A CRIMINAL.

    Now, if you paid for 12 months and the service is only delivered for 15 days, go ahead and start the chargeback process because that is actually a scam.

    If you paid for 12 months and the service is delivered for 6 months then cancelled, there's a different process, which is called small claims court. You don't need a lawyer.

  • @OpaqueRegistrant said: Good or service was not delivered (i.e. scam)

    Service was delivered, yes, but isn't fulfilled anymore. The service bought was a VM managed by a UK sole trader. No one here has that anymore, so chargeback is justified.

  • rpqurpqu Member

    @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @JasonM said:

    @forest said: The problem is cancelling services without refund. Sure, he's still keeping my server up so I have no reason to chargeback (not that I could after paying with cryptocurrency, anyway) or to take legal action, but he has terminated, without refund, the services of others.

    the reason Velox Media's customer to chargeback is simple and important one:
    1. User bought and paid for server to Lewis. Not VeloxMedia or Eric (new owner)
    2. Eric is allowing to run your server host with Velox Media at his sole discretion.
    3. Eric did not receive fund/revenue in his own account for your server. He is technically giving it for free as long as he can and thus he can suspend/terminate it at his own will. There is no legal or even any written contract/agreement between Eric/Velox Media, LLC and user.
    4. The future invoice after your service expiry date will be generated through Eric/Velox Media and then user and Velox will be officially under the contract of providing services.
    5. If you are a user who bought VPS on monthly basis and has renewed it then chances are its now legal contract you paid to Eric.
    6. If you are a user who bought annual/2yr/3yr server plan then you've paid Lewis, and not Eric/Velox Media, LLC and so Eric has no obligation to keep your server ON for 3 years. That's the main reason to chargeback, beyond there were reasons like lots of downtime as mentioned by other users.

    None of this is a legal reason for a chargeback. You're allowed to request a chargeback in the following circumstances:

    1. Unauthorized transaction
    2. Good or service was not delivered (i.e. scam)

    END OF STORY. If you willingly paid for something, you received what you paid for, and you request a chargeback anyway, that makes YOU A CRIMINAL.

    Now, if you paid for 12 months and the service is only delivered for 15 days, go ahead and start the chargeback process because that is actually a scam.

    If you paid for 12 months and the service is delivered for 6 months then cancelled, there's a different process, which is called small claims court. You don't need a lawyer.

    Where's Lewis Edwards?

  • edited January 4

    @NotFoundException said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said: Good or service was not delivered (i.e. scam)

    Service was delivered, yes, but isn't fulfilled anymore. The service bought was a VM managed by a UK sole trader. No one here has that anymore, so chargeback is justified.

    It being provided by a specific company is not part of the service. Did you sign a contract that said your server would be in a specific data center rack under the control of a specific company or did it just say you'd get a server?

    The contract can be with whoever, that's not what matters, that's who you can sue if they don't fulfill it. If the contract doesn't say where the server is, they're free to get someone else to provide the server on their behalf.

  • mp11mp11 Member

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @TimboJones said:

    @mp11 said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @JasonM said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said: I don't see the relevance. A business can buy another business and continue to honor customer contracts. This is not a reason for a chargeback.

    well, VeloxMedia, LLC users are not doing a chargeback because business was bought by other dude. The reason is Eric, the owner of Velox Media, LLC has threatened their customers that they are at his mercy to continue the server or not. It's always better to chargeback and shutdown the VPS from such provider who are irrational and bullying their users. If Eric didn't wanted customers that bought services from former owner Lewis, then he could have emailed everyone by professionally writing and telling his customers that he will be terminating their services as he finds it unsustainable. Instead, he choose to behave childish and very unprofessional so users left with only one option that is chargeback.

    Moreover, since his name and brand Velox Media is now tarnished, I don't think anyone will now go and buy services from such a silly fellow.

    Until they actually shut down your server and deny a refund, you are committing fraud by doing a chargeback for a service that is still being delivered. Penalty is jail time for you.

    complete BS, every payment processor which takes care of their customer safety will refund asap when they see this BS happening right now, because they already know how this will END, not good for the guy who formed the company.

    You're young, right? That's exceptionally naive. Every chargeback is loss of profit.

    As a payment processor, I would expect them to cover these situations:

    1) payment not authorized
    2) item significantly not as described.
    3) item or service not delivered.

    "Sir, did you authorize the payment? Did you receive it? Is it working? Then why the fuck are you bothering us?"

    Usually... True... However... Now their accounts is flagged, any somewhat reasonable explanation will do.

    Exactly, they are flagged now and monitored now on the payment processors.
    Sure I am young, almost 40 and you old 70-80?

    Have worked in several support jobs for companies like Playstation, Google, Ricoh and others and did those things daily in my job the last 2 years, but different context, not for kids companies which occur here.

    Thanked by 1Saragoldfarb
  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    @mp11 said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @TimboJones said:

    @mp11 said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @JasonM said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said: I don't see the relevance. A business can buy another business and continue to honor customer contracts. This is not a reason for a chargeback.

    well, VeloxMedia, LLC users are not doing a chargeback because business was bought by other dude. The reason is Eric, the owner of Velox Media, LLC has threatened their customers that they are at his mercy to continue the server or not. It's always better to chargeback and shutdown the VPS from such provider who are irrational and bullying their users. If Eric didn't wanted customers that bought services from former owner Lewis, then he could have emailed everyone by professionally writing and telling his customers that he will be terminating their services as he finds it unsustainable. Instead, he choose to behave childish and very unprofessional so users left with only one option that is chargeback.

    Moreover, since his name and brand Velox Media is now tarnished, I don't think anyone will now go and buy services from such a silly fellow.

    Until they actually shut down your server and deny a refund, you are committing fraud by doing a chargeback for a service that is still being delivered. Penalty is jail time for you.

    complete BS, every payment processor which takes care of their customer safety will refund asap when they see this BS happening right now, because they already know how this will END, not good for the guy who formed the company.

    You're young, right? That's exceptionally naive. Every chargeback is loss of profit.

    As a payment processor, I would expect them to cover these situations:

    1) payment not authorized
    2) item significantly not as described.
    3) item or service not delivered.

    "Sir, did you authorize the payment? Did you receive it? Is it working? Then why the fuck are you bothering us?"

    Usually... True... However... Now their accounts is flagged, any somewhat reasonable explanation will do.

    Exactly, they are flagged now and monitored now on the payment processors.
    Sure I am young, almost 40 and you old 70-80?

    Have worked in several support jobs for companies like Playstation, Google, Ricoh and others and did those things daily in my job the last 2 years, but different context, not for kids companies which occur here.

    Lol, old but not that old fwiw.

    More like, mature but sexy ;)

    Thanked by 2mp11 barbarza
  • edited January 4

    @mp11 said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    @TimboJones said:

    @mp11 said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @JasonM said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said: I don't see the relevance. A business can buy another business and continue to honor customer contracts. This is not a reason for a chargeback.

    well, VeloxMedia, LLC users are not doing a chargeback because business was bought by other dude. The reason is Eric, the owner of Velox Media, LLC has threatened their customers that they are at his mercy to continue the server or not. It's always better to chargeback and shutdown the VPS from such provider who are irrational and bullying their users. If Eric didn't wanted customers that bought services from former owner Lewis, then he could have emailed everyone by professionally writing and telling his customers that he will be terminating their services as he finds it unsustainable. Instead, he choose to behave childish and very unprofessional so users left with only one option that is chargeback.

    Moreover, since his name and brand Velox Media is now tarnished, I don't think anyone will now go and buy services from such a silly fellow.

    Until they actually shut down your server and deny a refund, you are committing fraud by doing a chargeback for a service that is still being delivered. Penalty is jail time for you.

    complete BS, every payment processor which takes care of their customer safety will refund asap when they see this BS happening right now, because they already know how this will END, not good for the guy who formed the company.

    You're young, right? That's exceptionally naive. Every chargeback is loss of profit.

    As a payment processor, I would expect them to cover these situations:

    1) payment not authorized
    2) item significantly not as described.
    3) item or service not delivered.

    "Sir, did you authorize the payment? Did you receive it? Is it working? Then why the fuck are you bothering us?"

    Usually... True... However... Now their accounts is flagged, any somewhat reasonable explanation will do.

    Exactly, they are flagged now and monitored now on the payment processors.
    Sure I am young, almost 40 and you old 70-80?

    Have worked in several support jobs for companies like Playstation, Google, Ricoh and others and did those things daily in my job the last 2 years, but different context, not for kids companies which occur here.

    They would still have to do something wrong for a chargeback to be legit. You still can't issue one just because.

    Note that your bank always evaluates your chargeback request before they make it happen.

  • mp11mp11 Member

    love mature, I look more like 25 and have more sympathy with young ppl, but also had several assistant jobs for older executives when I was younger, still have C level thinking and some conns, always was like that.

    Thanked by 1Saragoldfarb
  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    [@OpaqueRegistrant said]
    They would still have to do something wrong for a chargeback to be legit. You still can't issue one just because.

    Not necessarily. They usually make a risk assessment. Like, if they honour a chargeback and they're wrong, who's gonna sue them?

    Before an account gets flagged, legal is involved. The moment its flagged, seller is screwed and chargebacks are a free for all.

    In this case especially cos the seller has been like, acting shady. Providing false and/or inaccurate data.

    Seller screwed up big time. They know it. We know it.

    Only party gonna be a pain in the arse are clients, not seller, cos he AWOL.

    Now who do you think PP/CC is gonna side with?

    Legality aside.

    Thanked by 1JohnnySac
  • @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @NotFoundException said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said: Good or service was not delivered (i.e. scam)

    Service was delivered, yes, but isn't fulfilled anymore. The service bought was a VM managed by a UK sole trader. No one here has that anymore, so chargeback is justified.

    It being provided by a specific company is not part of the service. Did you sign a contract that said your server would be in a specific data center rack under the control of a specific company or did it just say you'd get a server?

    The contract can be with whoever, that's not what matters, that's who you can sue if they don't fulfill it. If the contract doesn't say where the server is, they're free to get someone else to provide the server on their behalf.

    That would imply, that the contract was transferred to Eric, but that isn't the case. Eric only received the assets. You still only have a contract with Lewis, not Velox Media and not Eric. Lewis doesn't fulfill the contract anymore

  • edited January 4

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    [@OpaqueRegistrant said]
    They would still have to do something wrong for a chargeback to be legit. You still can't issue one just because.

    Not necessarily. They usually make a risk assessment. Like, if they honour a chargeback and they're wrong, who's gonna sue them?

    Before an account gets flagged, legal is involved. The moment its flagged, seller is screwed and chargebacks are a free for all.

    In this case especially cos the seller has been like, acting shady. Providing false and/or inaccurate data.

    Seller screwed up big time. They know it. We know it.

    Only party gonna be a pain in the arse are clients, not seller, cos he AWOL.

    Now who do you think PP/CC is gonna side with?

    Legality aside.

    I mean, the obvious answer to that is that the merchant could sue you. Or call the police on you, since it's a criminal dispute at that point not just a civil one.

  • edited January 4

    @NotFoundException said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @NotFoundException said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said: Good or service was not delivered (i.e. scam)

    Service was delivered, yes, but isn't fulfilled anymore. The service bought was a VM managed by a UK sole trader. No one here has that anymore, so chargeback is justified.

    It being provided by a specific company is not part of the service. Did you sign a contract that said your server would be in a specific data center rack under the control of a specific company or did it just say you'd get a server?

    The contract can be with whoever, that's not what matters, that's who you can sue if they don't fulfill it. If the contract doesn't say where the server is, they're free to get someone else to provide the server on their behalf.

    That would imply, that the contract was transferred to Eric, but that isn't the case. Eric only received the assets. You still only have a contract with Lewis, not Velox Media and not Eric. Lewis doesn't fulfill the contract anymore

    Lewis has the right to fulfill his side of the contract by any means he likes, including by asking Eric to fulfill it, unless you have a contract with Lewis that says he can't do that. Think of it as dropshipping.

    Think about it: half the providers on here are reselling someone else's servers, sliced up intoVPS. If I have a contract with aluy but the physical machine is owned by onlyservers who they resell, is that a violation? No it's not.

  • @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @NotFoundException said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @NotFoundException said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said: Good or service was not delivered (i.e. scam)

    Service was delivered, yes, but isn't fulfilled anymore. The service bought was a VM managed by a UK sole trader. No one here has that anymore, so chargeback is justified.

    It being provided by a specific company is not part of the service. Did you sign a contract that said your server would be in a specific data center rack under the control of a specific company or did it just say you'd get a server?

    The contract can be with whoever, that's not what matters, that's who you can sue if they don't fulfill it. If the contract doesn't say where the server is, they're free to get someone else to provide the server on their behalf.

    That would imply, that the contract was transferred to Eric, but that isn't the case. Eric only received the assets. You still only have a contract with Lewis, not Velox Media and not Eric. Lewis doesn't fulfill the contract anymore

    Lewis has the right to provide you the server by any means he likes, including by asking Eric to provide it, unless you have a contract with Lewis that says he can't do that.

    Think about it: half the providers on here are reselling someone else's servers, sliced up into VPS. If I have a contract with aluy but the physical machine is owned by onlyservers who they resell, is that a violation? No it's not.

    Lewis went out of business, he isn't here anymore. You have a contract with a out of business sole trader. Obviously you can chargeback/dispute, when the other party of the contract went out of business and you have time left where the service should be provided.

  • SaragoldfarbSaragoldfarb Member, Megathread Squad

    @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @Saragoldfarb said:

    [@OpaqueRegistrant said]
    They would still have to do something wrong for a chargeback to be legit. You still can't issue one just because.

    Not necessarily. They usually make a risk assessment. Like, if they honour a chargeback and they're wrong, who's gonna sue them?

    Before an account gets flagged, legal is involved. The moment its flagged, seller is screwed and chargebacks are a free for all.

    In this case especially cos the seller has been like, acting shady. Providing false and/or inaccurate data.

    Seller screwed up big time. They know it. We know it.

    Only party gonna be a pain in the arse are clients, not seller, cos he AWOL.

    Now who do you think PP/CC is gonna side with?

    Legality aside.

    I mean, the obvious answer to that is that the merchant could sue you. Or call the police on you, since it's a criminal dispute at that point not just a civil one.

    Sure... But why would a criminal call the police to make a criminal complaint about someone?

    I have £4 to loose + maybe a fine (at very very worst, never gonna happen but let's say it would), now the complainant (fraudulent guy) will loose everything as he'd be outing himself.

    Just saying...

  • Anyone who suggests that a charge back is fraud is forgetting that in all likelihood the was never a valid contract to begin with, so Lewis didn't actually have legal standing to make the charge in the first place. He represented Velox as an incorporated business, but operated it as a sole trader. There are very specific requirements for disclosure that were not followed.

  • @NotFoundException said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @NotFoundException said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said:

    @NotFoundException said:

    @OpaqueRegistrant said: Good or service was not delivered (i.e. scam)

    Service was delivered, yes, but isn't fulfilled anymore. The service bought was a VM managed by a UK sole trader. No one here has that anymore, so chargeback is justified.

    It being provided by a specific company is not part of the service. Did you sign a contract that said your server would be in a specific data center rack under the control of a specific company or did it just say you'd get a server?

    The contract can be with whoever, that's not what matters, that's who you can sue if they don't fulfill it. If the contract doesn't say where the server is, they're free to get someone else to provide the server on their behalf.

    That would imply, that the contract was transferred to Eric, but that isn't the case. Eric only received the assets. You still only have a contract with Lewis, not Velox Media and not Eric. Lewis doesn't fulfill the contract anymore

    Lewis has the right to provide you the server by any means he likes, including by asking Eric to provide it, unless you have a contract with Lewis that says he can't do that.

    Think about it: half the providers on here are reselling someone else's servers, sliced up into VPS. If I have a contract with aluy but the physical machine is owned by onlyservers who they resell, is that a violation? No it's not.

    Lewis went out of business, he isn't here anymore. You have a contract with a out of business sole trader. Obviously you can chargeback/dispute, when the other party of the contract went out of business and you have time left where the service should be provided.

    There's no such thing as an out of business sole trader, since a sole trader is just a person, unless he's dead. He's still responsible for all contracts. If he breaks a contract then he does, and if he doesn't break it then he doesn't. Until he breaks it, he hasn't broken it.

  • There's a reason that law school takes three years in the U.S. after obtaining a four year undergraduate degree, and multiple days of tests to get licensed.

    Most of you on both sides are missing the basic point.

    "Eric" as the purported successor to "Lewis" posted a statement that constitutes an "anticipatory repudiation" of everyone's agreements with Lewis.

    Given Eric's additional statement that Lewis went off with the money, and Lewis' statement that he is no longer involved in any way, there is no doubt that the aggrieved party (suckers who paid for pre-paid VPSes ten days before Lewis decided it was too arduous to perform even one month worth of his side of the bargain) can treat the statement as an immediate breach, suspend their own performance and seek remedies without waiting for the actual performance date.

    This is how business in the real world works, when it involves more than daily coffee money.

    Since even the most expensive 3 year pre-paid deal costs less than 15 minutes of any decent attorney's time, no one will litigate this.

    Nonetheless, it is important to know how things really work because someday in your job or life you might have more than pocket change at stake.

    Even McDonalds won't hand you the $1 Coke (that costs them 7 cents) in the drive-through until you hand over the dollar. When you pre-pay something for a year or more to a rando on the internet (of all places!), you are at their mercy with no recourse.

    The people who appeared to vouch for the Velox clown show all throughout have been totally silent in the face of your distress.

    UNLESS you can REQUEST a chargeback, which is an entirely civil, private legal matter. In fact, in most cases if either you or the payment processor disagrees with an action, you are all stuck contesting it in arbitration, there is no access to a court!

    So no, there are no police involved. In fact, you'd be lucky to get anyone involved.

    The guy trying to scare you into believing you can't charge back without legal consequence is the dumbest person on the internet today.

    I wonder who he is. It can't be anyone involved in this, since it's illegal to have multiple logins on the internet! (That's sarcasm, for some of you who need it spelled out.)

  • 59 pages! lol

  • @225thinker said:
    There's a reason that law school takes three years in the U.S. after obtaining a four year undergraduate degree, and multiple days of tests to get licensed.

    Most of you on both sides are missing the basic point.

    "Eric" as the purported successor to "Lewis" posted a statement that constitutes an "anticipatory repudiation" of everyone's agreements with Lewis.

    Given Eric's additional statement that Lewis went off with the money, and Lewis' statement that he is no longer involved in any way, there is no doubt that the aggrieved party (suckers who paid for pre-paid VPSes ten days before Lewis decided it was too arduous to perform even one month worth of his side of the bargain) can treat the statement as an immediate breach, suspend their own performance and seek remedies without waiting for the actual performance date.

    This is how business in the real world works, when it involves more than daily coffee money.

    Since even the most expensive 3 year pre-paid deal costs less than 15 minutes of any decent attorney's time, no one will litigate this.

    Nonetheless, it is important to know how things really work because someday in your job or life you might have more than pocket change at stake.

    Even McDonalds won't hand you the $1 Coke (that costs them 7 cents) in the drive-through until you hand over the dollar. When you pre-pay something for a year or more to a rando on the internet (of all places!), you are at their mercy with no recourse.

    The people who appeared to vouch for the Velox clown show all throughout have been totally silent in the face of your distress.

    UNLESS you can REQUEST a chargeback, which is an entirely civil, private legal matter. In fact, in most cases if either you or the payment processor disagrees with an action, you are all stuck contesting it in arbitration, there is no access to a court!

    So no, there are no police involved. In fact, you'd be lucky to get anyone involved.

    The guy trying to scare you into believing you can't charge back without legal consequence is the dumbest person on the internet today.

    I wonder who he is. It can't be anyone involved in this, since it's illegal to have multiple logins on the internet! (That's sarcasm, for some of you who need it spelled out.)

    I'd like to ask a question: None of us know who Eric really is. He's hiding his identity from us, isn't he?

    In other words, an anonymous individual is now fully in control of our data and manipulating it—for example, deleting servers.

    Does this constitute a crime under U.S. or U.K. law?

  • x0x0xx0x0x Member

    Will the ship stay on course, or will it capsize with an unknown captain at the wheel?

  • @225thinker said: "Eric" as the purported successor to "Lewis" posted a statement that constitutes an "anticipatory repudiation" of everyone's agreements with Lewis.

    There has been no repudiation. The servers are online. Providing an option for prioritized migration or enhanced protection during a massive DDoS attack isn't a breach; it’s transparent communication. In the real world, when an ISP or data center raises costs due to emergency mitigation, those costs have to be addressed.

    @225thinker said: The people who appeared to vouch for the Velox clown show all throughout have been totally silent in the face of your distress.

    It’s easy to call it a 'clown show' from the sidelines, but Eric stepped in to prevent a total immediate blackout that would have happened if Lewis had simply pulled the plug. He is trying to bridge a gap with zero remaining budget.

    @225thinker said: The guy trying to scare you into believing you can't charge back without legal consequence is the dumbest person on the internet today.

    Encouraging a mass wave of chargebacks is the quickest way to ensure nobody gets service. Chargebacks freeze merchant assets, meaning the money needed to pay the data centers for your VPS uptime disappears. If you want the servers to stay on, you don't starve the person currently paying the power bill.

  • @deafcon said: Anyone who suggests that a charge back is fraud is forgetting that in all likelihood the was never a valid contract to begin with, so Lewis didn't actually have legal standing to make the charge in the first place. He represented Velox as an incorporated business, but operated it as a sole trader. There are very specific requirements for disclosure that were not followed.

    Calling the entire history of the service 'fraud' just to justify a chargeback is a dangerous game. Banks look at whether you received the digital goods you paid for. If you’ve been using the VPS up until this attack, claiming 'fraud' now because you found a typo in the business registration is a fast track to having your bank account flagged for a false claim.

    Eric is trying to sustain a dying service. If you spend all your energy trying to find legal loopholes to bankrupt him, don't complain when he finally decides it's not worth the headache and shuts everything down."

  • @coinmunch said: meaning the money needed to pay the data centers for your VPS uptime disappears

    But Lewis already took those right ?

    Thanked by 1rpqu
  • @emperor said: But Lewis already took those right ?

    >
    That is exactly the point—Lewis took the money and ran. Eric didn't 'buy' a profitable business; he stepped in to try and save a sinking ship that was already $0 in the black and running at a 25% loss. When Lewis left, he didn't leave a bank account full of prepayments to cover the next year of electricity and data center bills. He left a mountain of debt and a bunch of active servers that Eric is now paying for out of his own pocket.

    Instead of attacking the person who is actually standing in the data center trying to fix things, maybe focus on the fact that without 'Eric,' there would be no service to complain about at all. He’s trying to bridge the gap with zero resources—give the guy a break for being honest about how bad the situation Lewis left behind actually is."

  • @coinmunch said: Lewis took the money and ran.

    So in your words chargebacks are taken from Lewis account instead Erics, so you have nothing to worry about. However you have to worry if they are same person.

  • @coinmunch said:

    @deafcon said: Anyone who suggests that a charge back is fraud is forgetting that in all likelihood the was never a valid contract to begin with, so Lewis didn't actually have legal standing to make the charge in the first place. He represented Velox as an incorporated business, but operated it as a sole trader. There are very specific requirements for disclosure that were not followed.

    Calling the entire history of the service 'fraud' just to justify a chargeback is a dangerous game. Banks look at whether you received the digital goods you paid for. If you’ve been using the VPS up until this attack, claiming 'fraud' now because you found a typo in the business registration is a fast track to having your bank account flagged for a false claim.

    Eric is trying to sustain a dying service. If you spend all your energy trying to find legal loopholes to bankrupt him, don't complain when he finally decides it's not worth the headache and shuts everything down."

    Now you're changing the narrative, Eric.

    Thanked by 1JohnnySac
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