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Ebay: Ever suspect you been scammed?

I personally like Ebay and use it when ever its appropriate. However I always deal with powersellers. It serves its purpose. I just bought 2 new Nextels from a seller and they are perfect. Ive only once had a problem on ebay selling something where the buyer had some sob story of her kid in the hospital and she couldnt get to a computer and then she didnt have the money. I finally recieved my mney after basically threatening to drop ebay a note. I can usually sniff out the scams and poor sellers by looking at recent transactions. Just like any market place...there are people looking to scam/screw someone to get a quick buck.
 
Yeah, it's too bad...in the early days it was fun to buy and sell there. By the way, it was really nice to meet you at the last meeting. ;)

Thanks Chuck, you too :) It's always nice to put a face with a name
 
Ebay

Yes, there ARE bad apples everywhere:p
I have to admit, I bought a Canon 5MP digital camera a while back and I am still using it. Works fine and I saved a bunch of $ buying it on EBay. I actually got the seller's phone number and called him. Turns out he was a great guy and the transaction worked out fine.

I personally like Ebay and use it when ever its appropriate. However I always deal with powersellers. It serves its purpose. I just bought 2 new Nextels from a seller and they are perfect. Ive only once had a problem on ebay selling something where the buyer had some sob story of her kid in the hospital and she couldnt get to a computer and then she didnt have the money. I finally recieved my mney after basically threatening to drop ebay a note. I can usually sniff out the scams and poor sellers by looking at recent transactions. Just like any market place...there are people looking to scam/screw someone to get a quick buck.
 
As someone who has bought/sold over a half a million dollars (probably more) worth of stuff on eBay in over a decade of using it (Since September '97), and with as many issues that I have with the current status quo there, I have to say that the actual instances of shill bidding are probably a lot lower than you'd think.

eBay watches very carefully for it - a while ago when Best Offers were first introduced, I wanted to see what the buyer saw when they sent me a BO, so I sent myself a BO for $1 on a $1,000 item. As a result, they closed my selling account, my buying account (I keep one account for each), my wife's account and my brother's account! Apparently he had checked his auctions at my house once and they'd associated my IP address with his account. Ultimately I got all the accounts re-instated, but based on how quickly it happened, I suspect that it was automated, based on IP address. Obviously, they can't do anything about coordinating with a friend/associate in another place, but I do think this is a priority concern for eBay.

Also, from a buyer's perspective, sniping is a great thing - in regular format auctions, the more bidders on an item, the higher it is likely to sell for - each bidder seems to have this idea that if someone else is willing to pay X, then X+$1 should be reasonable too. With sniping there is a lot less action on the auctions and the ultimate prices are generally lower.

Yes, you might have been outbid by a sniper, but the sniper had a maximum dollar amount that was simply higher than what your maximum bid was. You didn't lose - someone was simply willing to pay more than you. It wasn't really any different than if they had put that bid in 2 days earlier. (Assuming that you had put in the maximum amount you were willing to pay.)

As far as using a software program or whatever to do your sniping - let's say you have a broadband connection and the other guy has a dialup connection (yep, there are still people that do!) should you have to throttle your connection back to match the lowest common denominator?

If eBay was really concerned about sniping, they'd introduce extended auction times, whereby each bid extended the auction by some set time. So, if an auction ends at 2pm and someone bids at 1:58, the end time would become 2:08..etc. (Bids earlier than 1:50 would not extend). There are a few auction sites that do this - personally, I hate it.

All that said, if there was an effective alternative to eBay, I'd leave eBay in a second. Overall, the eBay experience is a far cry from what it used to be.
 
I think part of it is that alot of earlier eBay users were actually slightly more educated (and earlier adopters of the internet and were also used to trading online from previous experiences with dialup bulletin boards and USENET). It has since in the last 5-10 years become completed overwhelmed with people from all walks of life. As a result, alot of these earlier adopters have since completely left or found other avenues (such as craiglist or dedicted forums like reefcentral) and the chances of a negative experience from any single transaction has gone up significantly. I've found that alot of ebayers are horrendous at communication, have very poor listings, and alot of people surprisingly do not even bother to put any packaging into their boxes when shipping (even for delicate items)

IMHO any savings you get now is more or less negated by the overall grief you will be suffering from dealing with some of these people. That is not to say you cannot sniff out alot of the scammers, but there's hardly anything you can buy that could be considered much of a bargain these days - and for the amount of time you can spend on that site for such meager returns, might as well do something more productive and fun like look at your reef tank and do some water tests.
 
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