And yes, I do understand how Paypal works. All you have to do is put the 
instructions on there on how the donor can stop the payment.

Sean Burns <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:          On Tue, Mar 20, 2007 at 
11:17:23PM -0500, Robert Citek wrote:
> Sean Burns wrote:
> > On Tue, Mar 20, 2007 at 06:36:44PM -0700, John Wurth wrote:
> >> Control it or not if the donation is made to you, in this case 
> >> through a link on your website, then you do.
> 
> John, did you follow through and click on the link?
> 
> >> I'll cc this to my board attorney Norah Ryan. She's one of the top
> >> business litigators in the metro area maybe she can explain better
> >> than me.
> 
> Before you contact your lawyer, are you sure you fully understand the
> relationship between BWorks, PayPal, and the donor and how the
> transaction is structured?

He already contacted his lawyer. That last email was cc'd to her. But
no, I don't think he followed the link or understands PayPal. 

> > I'm a proponent of the KISS philosophy, Keep it Super Simple. In 
> > light of that, I took the recurring donation button off. It's not 
> > even an option any more. Especially if we have to have a lawyer 
> > approve every little thing we do, which is also not an option.
> 
> If we are going to be worried about being sued over every little thing
> we do, we may as well close up shop. Having a "recurring donation"
> button on our website is the least of our worries.
> 
> Sean, can you put the "recurring donation" HTML back in? If it makes
> you feel more comfortable, you can comment it out by enclosing it in
> HTML comment structure. <!--- --->

I can. I keep the entire site backed up. I'm comfortable with it on
there and kept uncommented. I'll put it back up if you're cool. 

sean


         

 
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