Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Web
  4. Legacy Archives

PayPal terminates partnership with Alibaba

Add as a preferred source on Google
PayPal AliExpress split
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Online payment giant PayPal has announced it will be ending its year-long partnership with AliExpress, the wholesale goods service of China’s Alibaba that is aimed primarily at businesses and corporations. PayPal gives no reason for ending the relationship, but industry reports have the company unhappy with the amount of goods AliExpress is retailing directly to consumers rather than businesses.

“PayPal remains deeply committed to China by providing Chinese merchants access to a safer and easier way to sell to millions of our users all over the world,” wrote PayPal Asia Pacific’s director of communications Dickson Seow, in a statement. “You’ll continue to see new initiatives, products, and services from PayPal in China that help Chinese merchants grow their businesses by selling goods and services to our global buyers.”

Recommended Videos

PayPal says its overall payment volume in “Greater China” exceeded $4.4 billion during 2010, a 44 percent increase over 2009.

AliExpress is part of Alibaba.com, which is in turn part of the Alibaba Group. American Internet giant Yahoo has a 43 percent stake in the Alibaba Group, which has simultaneously become one of the company’s most valuable assets and a source of friction. Currently, Alibaba and Yahoo are working to resolve a dispute over transitioning Alibaba’s own online payment service, AliPay, into a separate corporate entity licensed to handle online payments in China. Yahoo claims it was caught by surprised when Alibaba spun off AliPay, and is working with Alibaba to ensure it is “appropriately compensated.”

PayPal announced its partnership with AliExpress a little over a year ago.

Geoff Duncan
Former Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Topics
The maker of ChatGPT wants to make open-source projects less of a security bargain
OpenAI launches Patch the Planet for open-source security, with over 30 open-source projects on board.
openai-chatgpt-os

OpenAI has launched Patch the Planet, a new initiative aimed at fixing one of the internet's quietest problems – the chronically underfunded security of open-source software.

Patch the Planet pairs OpenAI's most security-capable AI models with Trail of Bits, a security firm that has committed its entire research organization to the effort, alongside support from HackerOne and Calif.

Read more
I sifted through the Prime Day chaos to find the best Apple deals actually worth buying
Apple's about to hike prices. Prime Day 2026 is your last chance to save up to $150 on MacBooks, AirPods, and iPads.
Prime Day Deals on Apple Products

Apple is set to increase the prices for its upcoming iPhones and MacBooks, as the company can no longer offset the rising RAM and storage costs. That means, if you are looking to upgrade your aging device, you should buy the current-generation Apple products rather than wait for the new ones.

And since Amazon Prime Day is offering good discounts on the latest iPhones, iPads, MacBooks, and other Apple accessories, this is the perfect time to buy them. Here are my favorite Amazon Prime Day deals for Apple products. 

Read more
This sneaky photo trick gets AI chatbots to ignore their safety rules
Florida International University researchers built a method that nearly doubled the rate of harmful responses from a tested AI model using nothing but pixel-level edits in an image.
JaiLIP AI chatbot exploit image

A photo that looks completely ordinary to you could carry a hidden instruction to trick an AI chatbot into ignoring its safety rules, according to new research out of Florida International University. The study found that pixel-level alterations in an image that are invisible to the human eye can be enough to confuse the model reading the image and lead it to generate responses it would normally block.

Hacking what the AI sees

Read more