eBay's Doing A Great Job Of Cutting Out Fraud -- If You're A Luxury Goods Maker
from the the-other-side-of-the-coin dept
Earlier in the week, eBay and the New York AG boasted about busting a jeweler that was scamming the site's users by inflating prices with phantom bids, despite the fact that a single bust really meant nothing in the grand scheme of things. Now, the company's gotten the New York Times and IHT to bite, with a story about how eBay is supposedly making great progress in its fight against fraud and scams. The article talks about how eBay says complaints from luxury-goods makers about counterfeit goods for sale on the site have dropped by 60 percent following the institution of new restrictions on sellers and other measures. That's really great -- for the luxury goods companies in question -- but again, eBay's supposed triumph does little to combat the other, wider complaints of its user base. It is nice that the company has made it harder for scammers to sell fake items to unknowing buyers, and the eBay says that other changes it has made, including forcing all sellers to register with PayPal and putting a new feedback system into place, will further help crack down on fraudsters. But it's hard to buy into that claim when PR-driven articles like this focus solely on the perspective of companies who say eBay's a haven for fake goods, rather than talking about any of the myriad issues eBay customers and users face.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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eBay Fraud
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Re: eBay Fraud
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I've read a few horror stories about Ebay purchases - and you know... for all that, it's not even worth getting stung once.
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eBay does not care to trouble themselves for avera
I remained polite, gave benefit of the doubt and figured maybe his supplier gave him bad info...said I'd be happy with a simple refund...he replied with even more abusive responses. Got all my ducks in a row, including backup from the OEM, and when I filed complaint with eBay, prepared to then he started accusing me of trying to cheat him and also that the OEM was lying.
I gave eBay all the information, including contacts at the OEM, and eBay's solution, between their policy and PayPal, was simply that I could return it. However, I'd have to pay shipping and would not be reimbursed for either shipping even though it was based on a fraudulent claim.
So even though I could document that this was a scam, that the seller was taunting me in email saying that I can do what I want but eBay won't help me and he'd simply just resell it, and that the seller purposely had recently been pulling this scam on others...the only solution that eBay had would end up with me or any one else paying for shipping both ways on an item we would not even end up with.
If eBay really did care, in the face of significant evidence I spent time amassing and offered to them freely this is what they might have done: they would have actually requested it all, reviewed it, and then seeing as it was surprisingly bulletproof, withheld funds from the seller and got us ALL of our money back.
Instead, the seller continues to do the same thing a year later, as feedback and minor research into what he's selling shows.
And before the flamers start...yes, it's buyer beware, and to some degree it is my fault for not knowing that the item I bought didn't exactly exist. But regardless of what someone does or not research or know first, fraud is fraud, lying is lying, and if eBay is not going to do anything when it can actually be proved (which isn't that often), then they are negligent.
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eBay
An interesting consideration in all this is that there are some problems that cannot eliminated or even dealt with in any effective way under eBay's existing structure. Feedback extortion is one.
--Mike
http://www.michaelabanks.com
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