Been 3 weeks now waiting for this item, even spoken to the guy on the phone and still nothing, anybody know how long it takes to get my money back if i file an ebay complaint or whatever its called?
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Originally posted by Champloo View PostAs I said, it was a stupid thing to do. If I have to defend myself on it though, then it was a once off and he had genuinely listed the item at the wrong price and got in a panic on the last day that it was going to sell much lower than anticipated, so what was I going to say when he asked me to use my account for one bid?
but its the same kind of excuse as the people who buy loads of tickets or even the recent radio 1 tickets
Originally posted by ticket touting fekker
i really wanted to go to this and i thought my weekend was free but i've realised that i'm going on holiday with the family, so thought i would offer them here so somebody else can go (ticket value £25 - ebay price £100)
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Originally posted by Largo View PostBeen 3 weeks now waiting for this item, even spoken to the guy on the phone and still nothing, anybody know how long it takes to get my money back if i file an ebay complaint or whatever its called?
Not sure about how long it takes with getting money back, as whenever it has happened to me the seller always provides when paypal persue him.
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Sorry but I have to agree. It is harsh for you but your bro' was doing something specifically prohibited by eBay via your account. How can they differentiate between who has listed the items and who was bidding them up fraudulently? You could appeal and explain the situation, leaving out the fact you knowingly let him do it, but I don't rate your chances and it will take time to sort out either way.
It's your bro' who needs the slap not eBay. All they're doing is what they're supposed to ie. protecting bidders from sellers engaging in dodgy practices. I'd make your bro' relist all those items of yours and then ban him from using your account ever again.
Largo: I waited 2 weeks with no item/no contact before opening a Paypal Dispute. You then have 20 days in which they encourage you to settle the dispute amicably. The seller gets a Paypal warning which may spur him into doing the right thing if he is dodgy. But it is also a useful cooling off period to give a genuine seller the benefit of the doubt. There might be a good reason (accident, bereavement etc) why the delay has occurred.
However, if you're certain he is mucking you around at any time during that 20 day period you can Escalate the Paypal Dispute. Once done Paypal will investigate and that is what takes the time. I think they say 30+ days possibly it's more.
In my case, the details were very simple; he contacted me directly only once, 3 weeks after I'd bought the item, promised to provide a refund/replacement within 7 days. That was (almost) the last I heard from him. Paypal actually found in my favour in under 10 days from escalating the dispute and my credit card was refunded immediately.
Unfortunately a month later I found that the git has now left me negative feedback complaining about the fact that I'd opened the Paypal dispute and he'd also been investigated by the Royal Mail as a result. I've noticed since then his listings have all disappeared but my 100% perfect Feedback rating is now badly sullied because I'm only an occasional eBay user.
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Champloo, if your brother logged into your account from his own computer it was probably an IP match that got you both caught. I can't see it being address related as there'd be problems if for example you moved around a couple of times and someone living at one of your old addresses happened to bid unknowingly on your items.
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I agree with other people on here.
What eBay did is fair but to be honest I think you got off lightly as I'd rather people who did this were banned rather than just having their sales removed. After all you were involved in attempting to con people out of money and that shouldn't be tolerated in any form by eBay.
I am a little surprised that they don't ban people when the contract we agree with eBay states that this sort of practice is prohibited.
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Originally posted by toythatkills View PostIf they wanted to stop people doing this they shouldn't charge them an added fee to add a reserve price. (I assume they still do this)
I'm not saying it's OK to shill bid, just that eBay bring this stuff on themselves.
i think an instant ban would be the way to erradicate shill bidding and bid shielding
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Originally posted by toythatkills View PostThere's really no excuse for charging to add a reserve fee apart from sheer greed on eBays part. It's not costing them any more to host the listing, and the final value fee should cover any reserve price by the item selling for more. Yet somehow they feel this is justified
for cheapness i've found best offer auctions to be a better deal as they only charge you the basic listing fee to list it and a final valuation if it sells
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Originally posted by John Parry View PostWhat eBay did is fair but to be honest I think you got off lightly as I'd rather people who did this were banned rather than just having their sales removed. After all you were involved in attempting to con people out of money and that shouldn't be tolerated in any form by eBay.
I am a little surprised that they don't ban people when the contract we agree with eBay states that this sort of practice is prohibited.
And a straight ban? I think temp banning my account, closing all my listings, and taking the fee's is more than enough. It's especially annoying that they waited over a week to pick me up on this, just after I had put my listings up.
Buster: What I did has nothing in common with ticket touting.
I was just venting anger in any case, not expecting sympathy as such.
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Originally posted by MattyD View PostChamploo, if your brother logged into your account from his own computer it was probably an IP match that got you both caught. I can't see it being address related as there'd be problems if for example you moved around a couple of times and someone living at one of your old addresses happened to bid unknowingly on your items.
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Just logged into eBay to leave some feedback for a few things I'd bought and got this pop-up:
Anybody know anything about this? Surely if you're buying something from somebody and they start pissing around then negative feedback is the correct thing to leave?Last edited by JP; 18-05-2008, 15:15.
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