Ok so its been a while since I've posted back in this thread, so far Sales are down lower than before due to people using Paypal as the main buyer but in fairness think about how long and convoluted it takes to get a paypal account set up and linked to your bank account in the first place, Paymentwall isn't too bad in comparison but I would really appreciate if they would include a pay by card direct form of payment for my customers (It would definatly increase sales, as nearly everyone has a debit card, but most can't be arsed to deal with all the long processes of something like Paymentwall. Possibly if they setup a debit/credit card payment system with something like Sagepay they would be sorted.)

But whilst it seems unresponsiveness on their behalf after what seemed like a few automated emails originally I did get some actual interaction with one of Netloads staff asking me to choose a "different payment methode" (because their English sucks ass) so I chose EU Bank transfer and to cancel the payment from the 25th August (which had been sent through by paypal then reversed that day) so it took them two weeks but the payment was finally re-added to my account. I have to give them some defence, whilst it may seem very very slow (which it is) they are only a small team and we have been swarming them with WTF Notices. So now that has been cleared, I have asked them to cancel all the other paypal requests which have spanned across the month of September, and requested for EU Bank Transfer on the 11th. Hopefully it will come in by the 11th October like usual.

My main idea is that whilst there has been this serious payment issue it might just reset 30 days. (so if you requested on the 25th of August via paypal then had it changed to a different payment system, it will take another 30 days to will most likely come in 30 days after whenever it got changed, in my case 11th October) Basically September is a dead month for payments and they are using this month to sort everything out their end. May seem slow but stuff is going on just think of how skewed the customers to staff ratio is.