12-09-2013, 02:36 AM
freeradical wrote:
[quote=Black]
[quote=Filliam H. Muffman]
[quote=Black]
[quote=Filliam H. Muffman]
[quote=Black]
[quote=Filliam H. Muffman]
[quote=hal]
[quote=Filliam H. Muffman]
This has been one of my biggest complaints about ebay since I first started buying (around 1998?). They only care about getting their fees, and they eliminated only way to cut them off from income when they bought PayPal. They don't care about individual buyers/sellers. They will only pay attention to a call/email from a large business or an important law enforcement officer with the direct phone number to ebay corporate security office.
Edit: is there a way to get a UPS account so you can generate a tracking number but not have them charge you until it has been picked up?
This is not true at all. When I first spotted this scam, the buyer account had something like 300 + feedback in just a couple of weeks. Now ebay is managing to stop them before they reach 100. Perhaps you forgot about the old days when 100s of scammy apple sales would launch at a time and stayed listed for several hours. You seem to think that it is easy to stop this activity - it is not. Not without a magic wand.
If they really cared, there would be a link to report auctions. Some AI would look at whose account was reporting it, which account was being reported, age of both accounts, and the accuracy rating of the person reporting it. They could ban an auction/account in milliseconds.
They do actually work to try to keep ebay safe - if EVERYONE thought as you do, they would have no biz at all. Every item that catch these guys and cut off the account, ebay losses money.
I don't really believe there is a significant portion of their income is being lost that they can't write off.
And I have a UPS account, but the minimum cost is at least $6 - first class is under $2. UPS never charges until it's delivered - not sure how this might be effective.
Generate a tracking number as soon as the auction ends. Send them the tracking number. Never ship the item until you have payment in an account that you can cut off from ebay access so they can't reverse the charges.
Filiam, you're usually pretty solid on info... but I'm wondering here if you have enough recent experience with eBay to understand how it currently works.
I have not listed anything for sale for over 10 years and I have not logged in to bid on an item in over 18 months. Does it look much different now if you log in? I only see the Report item link that takes me to the log in page. Will an auction be removed immediately, or a bidders account be deactivated, any time a "power user" reports something?
hal's response covers it, for the most part.
Your complaint is that they don't allow unlogged users to hammer the "report" links, and thus they don't care about stopping fraud?
Can you quote where I said that?
Just trying to figure out what your beef is- help me out.
hal and I think eBay's efforts to protect the buyer are pretty good and that there has been increasingly more attention to it over the years.
You seem to think otherwise...?
Just a test of the quoting system here...;-) Quotes coming through loud and clear on this end, Houston.