JSA
Super Freak
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2005
- Messages
- 1,055
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Edited to be MUCH more polite - Thanks Nemo.
Howdy folks!
Forgive - my title is half jest, and half reeeeeally pissed off at myself. Let me explain.....
You may remember a bit ago, I criticized a seller who was
selling their whole collection in one shot: Not A Good Seller
I thought they were a scammer, and stated so openly and plainly on the board.
Well, it turns out that the seller offered the items to another outside
party after they were sold on Ebay, and then refused to let the winning
bidder come down to collect them. No money was lost, as it was to be
paid at the time of collection, but this still sucks and they were a scammer,
as they didn't follow through with their sale.
The seller was actually informed about the thread here, and
signed up on the forum to defend himself.
They told the board to "watch and see" how trustworthy they are.
I called this one correctly, but the "vocal minority" (one really) wanted
to ignore all the signs that this was a likely scam. Most members here have
seen the signs before, but I caved to the comments, and didn't pursue the issue further.
1. 0 feedback or new seller
2. Bad grammar in auction listing
3. no pictures of all the items for sale
4. seller outside the US or conflicting addresses
5. doesn't allow paypal payment
6. VERY High-End statues for sale
(Scammers usually don't sell Orc Pitmasters)
These alone don't always spell scammer, but more often than not, they do.
So, long story short, if it looks like a duck and sounds like a duck, it likely is a duck.
Be careful no matter what, and if it sounds fishy, or seems too good to be true, don't do it!
Very politely yours,
JS
Howdy folks!
Forgive - my title is half jest, and half reeeeeally pissed off at myself. Let me explain.....
You may remember a bit ago, I criticized a seller who was
selling their whole collection in one shot: Not A Good Seller
I thought they were a scammer, and stated so openly and plainly on the board.
Well, it turns out that the seller offered the items to another outside
party after they were sold on Ebay, and then refused to let the winning
bidder come down to collect them. No money was lost, as it was to be
paid at the time of collection, but this still sucks and they were a scammer,
as they didn't follow through with their sale.
The seller was actually informed about the thread here, and
signed up on the forum to defend himself.
They told the board to "watch and see" how trustworthy they are.
I called this one correctly, but the "vocal minority" (one really) wanted
to ignore all the signs that this was a likely scam. Most members here have
seen the signs before, but I caved to the comments, and didn't pursue the issue further.
1. 0 feedback or new seller
2. Bad grammar in auction listing
3. no pictures of all the items for sale
4. seller outside the US or conflicting addresses
5. doesn't allow paypal payment
6. VERY High-End statues for sale
(Scammers usually don't sell Orc Pitmasters)
These alone don't always spell scammer, but more often than not, they do.
So, long story short, if it looks like a duck and sounds like a duck, it likely is a duck.
Be careful no matter what, and if it sounds fishy, or seems too good to be true, don't do it!
Very politely yours,
JS
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