Hey everyone, I've been wrestling with this for a while now at work—trying to figure out whether sticking to fully offline processing really keeps user data safer in stuff like finance or healthcare verification compared to sending everything through some online API. Last year we had this tiny scare when a cloud-based tool we tested suddenly had a weird delay and I started imagining all sorts of interception risks during transit. Made me super paranoid about anything touching the internet when handling passports or IDs. What do you folks think actually makes the bigger difference for high-risk setups—keeping it all local on the device/server or going with a well-secured online service?
Hey everyone, I've been wrestling with this for a while now at work—trying to figure out whether sticking to fully offline processing really keeps user data safer in stuff like finance or healthcare verification compared to sending everything through…
PayPal isn’t as central to eBay as it once was, but it still has value for many sellers. With Managed Payments handling cards directly, PayPal is more of a supporting option now—useful for buyer trust, faster access to funds, and dispute familiarity. Fees are still a downside, especially layered on top of eBay’s own charges. That said, tools like PayPal for eBay and options around paypal working capital for ebay can help sellers manage cash flow. It’s no longer mandatory, but still useful depending on volume and margins.