dadsm3 said:
NEVER bid on an auction that keeps a bidder's identity private...
I'll respectfully disagree a little here :angel: There are legitimate reasons to keep a bidder's identity private. I once had an auction where someone else selling the same lens contacted bidders on MY auction to offer off-Ebay buy it now opportunities for HIS lens. I didn't know about it until one of my bidders was gracious enough to tell me about it. I had to report it to Ebay. It also keeps other fraudsters from contacting your bidders to either undercut you, or cheat your bidders.
So there are legitimate uses for the private bidder option. And I've seen some totally reputable sellers use it for precisely this reason.
I would suggest that there are better signs for spotting fraud ... be careful of:
1) auctions that only offer payment by Western Union or bank transfer;
2) auctions that ask for you to 'contact' them directly via email for an unofficial Buy-It-Now price
3) check feedback to see if there is a history of photographic equipment ... if they usually sell baby clothes, and suddenly sell a Leica MP Hammertone ... well, you know
4) check his/her other items for sale to see if there is suddenly a large number of high ticket items for sale at the same time
5) unusually short term auctions ... be careful of 1 or 3 day auctions that are designed to scam and run
6) finally, know know know your item of interest, know its characteristics, know its value ... if the price is too good to be true, it is
7) always email the Seller to ask a question about the item. Gauge his/her response to see if they actually know anything about the item. Judge the response for authenticity.
Follow all these rules, you will save yourself some trouble, I hope
🙂
The numbers of hijacked accounts is staggering....surely there must be a way Epay can ensure the item is being auctioned by the account owner and not some dirtbag.
I agree with you there, and, yes, there is. For instance, Ebay can easily install 'site key' technology, where your usual IP address (for instance, from Nebraska) is logged so that a hijacked account from a totally different IP address (say, from Russia or Malaysia) automatically flags the account.
Some banks now do that. Ebay can do it. It just doesn't want to spend the money to do so. Why? Curretnly, its customers bear the cost for fraud, Ebay doesn't. So it has no financial incentive to correct security
🙁 Only when there is a material flood of people away from Ebay will it correct itself.