QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ABOUT ORDERING ONLINE
Why
should I order from your online store?
Selection, quality and simplicity. At this late date premium Beta VCRs and
support materials are getting hard to find. While it is possible to find similar items through online auctions, yard sales or flea markets there is no assurance
that the product will perform as anticipated, or be delivered in good condition.
Many times the sellers don’t show much concern for these products. They
mostly want your money, the product
is considered as means to an end. This can result in misrepresented merchandise, shipping delays and damaged goods.
It can be very disappointing to receive something shipped to you that left
the seller in good shape but arrived mangled beyond repair with no hope of
a cost effective outcome. All
this is disguised behind the
Do
you actually have all the inventory listed in your Site?
If it shows to be in stock then I have at least one available. If I am out it will be indicated in the items start page. As you can see from my Site I offer a wide selection of Beta VCRs and related
items. Quantities of each can vary considerably due to the scarcity of supply.
Some merchandise, such as video tapes, labels,
etc. I have in large quantities. As for Beta VCRs and accessories
I like to keep at least five or more in inventory of
Betas that demonstrate that they have great appeal. If an item is particularly rare I might have only one or it might be out of stock. I try to alert shoppers when something is in short supply or is no longer available. When you place your
order I will advise you if an item is still available and when it is expected to ship.
All sales are processed in the order they are received and items cannot
be reserved.
Are
the pictures on your Site the actual item being offered?
In many instances they are, especially if the item is rare and I only have
one in my inventory. But in general it is my goal to have multiples of each
item, so that customers will not be disappointed by an out of stock condition.
It is impractical and unnecessary to continuously alter the images in my Website
as the inventory is being depleted or added for the
same model. They basically will look identical, only the serial
numbers will be different.
Do
you have a retail location?
No. I use mail order. A business that is one of the oldest and largest trades
in the world. With the introduction and viability of the internet new avenues
have opened up for offering more products to a larger customer base than ever
before. Many
Why don't you offer a catalog?
A catalog
could never be current and a mailing list of
prospective customers would be impossible to manage. Selling to previous customers
over and over again would quickly become impractical and severely limit my
customer base. By using the internet and word of mouth I have the potential
of reaching the most Beta VCR prospects in an economical, dignified and enjoyable manner.
Why
don’t you take credit cards for purchases directly from your Site?
Even though there have been many improvements regarding internet security, documentation
abounds on scams, frauds, stolen information and identity theft using the
internet. It involves too much risk. The added safety of an e-mail verification
and validation procedure, such as the one I use, helps ensure that both parties
are protected from predators. When you enter your contact and shipping information
in the order checkout form you are offered the option of purchasing using
a Postal Money Order, commercial money order, Cashiers Check or
credit cards through Paypal. In your order confirmation
e-mail you will receive the payment
information for the option you selected.
Why
not take credit cards over the phone?
As a customer making a purchase over an insecure phone line you are required
to give the person on the other end a set of numbers which gives them access
to money or credit in your name. You are placing a large amount of trust in
that person. That is a serious concern, but by no means
the only one. Both cell and land based phones transmit signals
over long distances between microwaves
towers that are
Can't
the risk be limited by using a debit account?
That is one way to reduce your risk. Let's examine the scenario where an account
has a set overdraft protection limit. If you have $1000 in your account plus
another $1000 added credit so your capped at a $2000.00 loss. Who
wants to expose themselves to this? Even if you successfully make your case
with the credit card company and prove the charges are false, you still will
have the temporary loss of the use of your money. Another thing to consider
when buying over the phone or internet is the high rate the credit card companies
charge. Purchases where the card holder is not present at the transaction
site (and the numbers are manually keyed in) is called a MOTO. An acronym for Mail Order
Telephone Order, and this is the charge that card companies live for. It
can be as high as ten percent, depending on your balance, credit situation
and type of purchase. Who wants that added expense?
What
assurance do I have that I will receive my item?
Once the order is received and processed you will be transmitted a confirmation
by e-mail. If for some reason there is to be any delay or an item is out of
stock, you will be informed of the situation and offered several options.
When your payment arrives you will be sent another e-mail posting the shipment
date and a tracking number. In the rare circumstance when something prevents
your order from being completed and no solution can be agreed upon,
your payment will be returned.
What
assurance do I have that you are legitimate?
Buying anything involves a certain amount of risk.
Companies go to great lengths to build up their image and credibility. They
do this in an effort to influence you to buy products from them and to feel
comfortable about doing it. But even the big boys make mistakes or don't play
fair all the time. This is why there are lemon laws, the consumer protection
agencies, warranties and arbitration. These are in place for your protection, but they
don’t cover every circumstance and they will not protect you in a lot
of cases. So based on these factors and others you
have to evaluate and then decide for yourself if you want to make a purchase. Longevity, past performance and reputation
are good benchmarks for consideration. The internet is
still relatively new so no e-commerce company has had a very long track record.
My Site has been around longer than most and I've specialized
in the Beta format for more than two decades. And
if you examine my Website closely, you will know that no scam
artist would invest the time, money, and effort in putting together such a dedicated Site
just for the purpose of stealing from an unsuspecting Betamax enthusiast.
The Beta market is too limited and the potential gain is far too small to
make this a lucrative endeavor for a rip-off artist. Look at the in-depth
process by which I prepare Betas for resale (see the Beta Refurbishing section);
is this an approach one would expect from anyone not wholly dedicated to his
craft and to this format? You might also wonder why I don't publish
testimonials from my customers. For the same reason I don't publish
my phone number, for privacy. It is the same principled approach
I take to my workbench when I serve your Beta needs; I will treat you as I
would want to be treated.
What
assurance do I have that you won’t just take my money?
Here again I refer you to the time invested in creating and publishing my
Site. The first version represented an investment of over eighteen months
before it went online. It has been improved much since then and is constantly
being updated and modified. It represents a sizable ongoing effort to publish
my specialty Beta products. It would be an exercise
in futility to use my Site just to take advantage of such a limited number of prospects.
Also, it wouldn't take very long for the internet community to catch on. In
addition, using the United States Postal Service for receiving payments offers the
added security of strict government legal sanctions. Any business or person
that uses the mails for fraud or misrepresentation invites serious litigation.
The USPS has an excellent record of prosecution of thieves that involve the
mails in a partnership of extortion, fraud or violence. Title 18, sections
1341, 1342, and 1343 covers fraud, swindles, and the use of fictitious names
or addresses for the purpose of theft. These are Federal statutes for crimes
that carry up to a one million dollar fine and a thirty year prison term.
No one in their right mind would ever risk this kind of punishment for the
few dollars gained from the bogus operation of a Site limited to only Beta
related sales.
Can
you furnish testimonials?
Many customers have offered to allow their endorsements,
along with their names and phone numbers, to be published in my Site. I
have declined to do so, as my policy of
strict privacy prevents me from exposing my customers to any potential unpleasantness. While I greatly
appreciate the kindness and sincerity of their offers, it is my duty to always act in their best interest. In addition,
the validity of testimonials is always
open to question, since most of those selected would likely be the ones only offering positive comments.
What
if I have a warranty claim?
Warranty claims are handle in a similar manner as with any business. If you
buy a stereo at an electronics store and something goes wrong during the warranty
period you pack it up and send it to a manufacturer’s repair facility.
Sometimes it’s fixed by the store, but only a few places can afford
the overhead of keeping a technician on call. It is recommended that you retain
the double shipping containers for returning an item should repairs be needed
at some future date,
whether in or out of warranty. On the rare occasion when a warranty situation arises
I view it as another opportunity to offer good and reliable service to my
clientele. All claims are handled courteously and as efficiently as possible.
If a warranty item can’t be repaired, a refund or replacement is offered.
What
if an item arrives damaged?
In the unlikely event that an item gets damaged in shipping a claim would
have to be submitted with the carrier. It is unfortunate that it can’t be
ruled out but it is the nature of the shipping business. I go to extensive
lengths to ensure that all my items arrive safely at your door. (See the "Shipping
Your Beta' section). Any claim would be handled on an individual basis, independent
of the outcome of the claim, with a replacement or refund being offered.
Why
don’t you publish your real name in your Site?
For the same reason as most other Site owners, for personal privacy and security.
While it is expected that movie stars, entertainers and famous people will
give up some of their privacy as a condition of their fame, most of us would
like to enjoy our regular way of life. I am very available by e-mail through
numerous locations throughout my Website. Once an order is placed I send
my business address in the confirmation
along with the other information. In addition I request you enter your phone
number, so I can reach you immediately should a problem arise. If you wish
for me to contact you for any reason, you can also request in an e-mail that I phone you. I access my e-mails daily and have a nationwide outgoing toll
free number for person to person contact.
Why
not just wait for a similar item to show up for auction?
I enjoy an auction as much as anyone, but it is a gamble. Not as much for
me on Beta items, because I have the parts and the support materials for making
repairs. I have purposely bid on
NOT MY OPINION FOLLOWS
(PLEASE
NOTE: Misterßetamax takes no responsibility for the information contained in the article below. It is the authors opinion, not mine. It is interesting to read because it explores the many sides to online buying. — This article is readily available
from the archives of Forbes magazine and they are responsible for it's content.)
Sleaze Bay
by: David H. Freedman, Forbes Magazine
Tom Peace figured he'd had enough of extortion and refused to pay another
penny to the blackmailer. The blackmailer, furious that the well had run dry,
carried out his threats. In one month he cost Peace $10,000 in business, by
Peace's estimate, and, as this is written, there's no end in sight.
Clearly, the blackmailer had something extremely damaging on Peace. Compromising
photographs? Evidence of illegal activity? An old drug bust? None of the above.
Try negative feedback on Peace's eBay listing. If that sounds far-fetched,
you're probably not one of the 16 million people who do business regularly
on eBay, where approximately $14 million changes hands every day and 18 million
new listings are posted each month. EBay is often gushingly described by fans,
many of whom are self-described addicts, as the ultimate frictionless marketplace.
Following in eBay's wake, auction sites of all sorts have proliferated. Enthusiasts
consider them the Web's killer application, one that breaks down geographic,
logistical, and informational barriers to the point where buying and selling
become acts of economic purity. Well, that's one way of looking at it. Here's
another: Ebay and its like are a free-for-all for con artists, sleaze balls,
shady operators, and outright thieves.
Why shouldn't it be? As is true of much of the Web, the characteristics that
make auction sites so appealing—anonymity, speed, low overhead, access
to millions of people, lack of outside regulation, an ability to interact
from a great distance—are the very same characteristics that make rip-offs
so easy.
To be fair, most people who use eBay and similar sites feel they have had
positive experiences, and those satisfied users include me. That's partly
because scam activity is clearly not the rule. When it comes to quantifying
the rate of fraud, eBay likes to throw around a figure of about 25 out of
1 million transactions. But the catch is that this number refers to the rate
of "confirmed fraud," meaning instances in which eBay investigated
a complaint and ended up siding with the complainant. Thus, that minuscule
figure may say more about eBay's unwillingness or inability to nail scammers—despite
the company's claim that it operates a 200-person fraud team—than it
does about the safety of its trading environment. The Federal Trade Commission
logged 10,700 fraud complaints last year from users of online consumer auctions,
and since eBay so powerfully dominates the fledgling industry, a great many
presumably pertain to that site. That figure is probably absurdly low, as
well. Would you call the FTC if Robogoo38 in Indiana sent you a defective
clock? (Be my guest: The complaint hot line is 877-FTC-HELP.)
One reason most eBay users seem content despite the possibility of fraud may
be that many have absolutely no idea they've been swindled. "The average
person who uses eBay is just completely ignorant," says one frequent
seller (who, like many of the people interviewed for this article, requested
anonymity because of his dependence on eBay for his livelihood). Part of the
problem is that eBay is growing so rapidly that a high percentage of its users
are newbies ill-prepared to defend themselves against the unfamiliar tactics
of the online unscrupulous. "Novice buyers are the biggest victims,"
says Rodrigo Sales, CEO of AuctionWatch, an online service that helps buyers
and sellers manage their auction transactions. Unfortunately, some eBay users
are unconcerned about scams because they've simply adopted many of the sleazy
tactics themselves. Almost every one of more than a dozen experienced buyers
and sellers I've spoken to admitted to sometimes using at least one blatantly
unethical tactic, and several confessed to activity that could conceivably
be prosecuted as felony fraud in most states.
An educated consumer is a safe consumer. In that spirit, here is Forbes complete
guide to the dark side of online auction trading.
SHILL BIDDING
Shill bidding involves a seller directly or indirectly placing a bid on his
or her own item in order to encourage legitimate bidders to bid higher. If
there are no bidders on an item, for example, a shill bid or two can attract
others, since bidders often feel there is safety in numbers. Or if there is
only one bidder, shill bids give him or her someone to bid against, driving
the price up. Sometimes bidding simply stalls, and a few well-timed shill
bids will help rekindle bidders' enthusiasm. Shilling, which is against eBay's
rules and in some cases is illegal, can be particularly devious and effective
when done in the final minutes of an auction, at which point bidders may be
tipped into a bidding frenzy. If the seller, or a confederate, finds that
his or her own bid is ending up on top, under eBay's rules he or she can simply
retract the bid. Even if the shill bid ends up winning the auction, the seller
can e-mail the second-highest bidder afterward saying that the winning bidder
turned out to be a deadbeat, and the item is available at that second-highest
bid price.
Some sellers set up fairly elaborate shilling schemes. Many enlist friends
or relatives as shills, and often entire communities of sellers—a group
of antique dealers who know one another, for example—will help each
other out. "If things are going slow, I know 10 different guys I can
call to shoot in a bid, and I return the favor," says an eBay seller
who makes an average profit of more than $2,000 a month on the site. (EBay
may not be very effective in ferreting out cheaters, but it has proved fierce
when it comes to dealing with those whose transgressions are exposed.)
Other sellers simply create multiple eBay identities, so that one seller can
simulate a crowd of eager bidders simply by opening up and bidding from several
eBay windows, each logged on under a different identity. In a rare case of
prosecution for online shilling, a woman in Twinsburg, Ohio, was charged earlier
this year with maintaining at least 36 eBay identities for shilling purposes.
Sellers without multiple identities can borrow eBay IDs and passwords from
friends to pull the same trick.
By many accounts, shilling is rife in the online auction world, and there
probably isn't much eBay or others can do about it. Unlike a live auction,
bidders and officials can't see the faces behind the bids. EBay claims its
computers are programmed to ferret out patterns of shilling—it won't
provide details, but presumably the software could look for bidders who always
seem to bid on the same seller's merchandise without ever winning, or who
frequently retract high bids. Still, eBay spokesperson Kevin Pursglove concedes
the programs haven't solved the problem. "At 1,200 bids per minute,"
he says, "it's quite a chore."
It's possible that eBay doesn't see all shilling as a terrible thing, on the
theory that shill bidding early in an auction can be regarded as harmless
"pump priming." Shilling used to be within eBay's rules, in fact,
and even today, according to Pursglove, such low-key shilling is unlikely
to inspire any official action. Unless, apparently, the pump priming works
a little too well: Last May, a California lawyer with at least five eBay identities
was booted off the site for entering a $4,500 bid on the second of 10 days
of bidding on a painting rumored to be by well-known California artist Richard
Diebenkorn, kicking off a bidding frenzy that saw the price climb to $135,805.
EBay later voided the sale.
EBay advises users to rely on its "proxy" bidding system to, among
other things, avoid overpaying for items. In this system, you enter the maximum
price you're willing to pay for an item, at which point the system will enter
your bid as being just over the current high bid, and it will continue to
bump your bid up just above any higher bids until your maximum bid is reached.
Sellers who use shill bidding love it when legitimate buyers enlist proxy
bidding in this way because it enables the seller to very quickly bring a
bidder to his or her maximum via shill bids. The seller simply keeps entering
shill bids until the system stops coming back with higher bids, at which point
the seller just retracts his or her last bid. EBay essentially says, "So
what?" to this scenario. On its site, it suggests that a buyer who uses
proxy bidding need not be concerned about paying too much, because the maximum
bid entered into the proxy system is supposed to be a price that the buyer
is willing to pay. So where's the harm?
Of course, that misses the whole point. A major attraction of the auction
process (for the bidder) is the opportunity to buy for less than your maximum—otherwise
everyone would just immediately post their best bid, and the highest would
take it. At eBay, as at any auction, you're supposed to be able to buy an
item by topping the second-highest legitimate bid. If you end up paying more
than that because you had to top a shill bid—even if you still end up
at or below your maximum—you've been defrauded.
EBay and its defenders never tire of pointing to the site's feedback system,
which allows buyers and sellers to rate each other publicly, as the ultimate
safeguard against pervasive fraud. If a seller rips someone off, then the
victim can say so in black and white, and other buyers will stay away. At
least that's how the system is supposed to work. In actuality, the feedback
system is massively corrupt and ends up abetting some of the most predatory
behavior that takes place on eBay.
The biggest problem with feedback is retaliation: If you have a legitimate
reason to single out someone for negative feedback, that person can easily
turn around and trash your reputation with no justification. There's usually
no way for someone reading a negative blurb to determine whether or not it
bears any relation to reality. EBay won't help you out if you've been dinged
by undeserved, retaliatory feedback. It provides the opportunity to add a
response to feedback, but everyone hit by negative feedback, bogus or not,
offers an indignant denial.
EBay's position? "If I were defrauded, I'd want to alert my fellow eBay
users," says Pursglove. That's disingenuous. A buyer zapped by retaliatory
feedback after providing negative comments on a sleazy seller has a real problem.
One of the few protections eBay places in users' hands is the ability for
sellers to cancel bids from buyers with whom they'd prefer not to do business.
Many sellers adopt a policy of routinely canceling bids from buyers with negative
feedback, and some even openly say so in their item listings. In other words,
if you expose a fraudulent seller via feedback, you may be locking yourself
out of a large number of auctions. No wonder most buyers hesitate to blow
the whistle, even when it's clear they're dealing with a crook. This is why
so many scammers operate with near impunity on eBay.
Even worse, some of the biggest scam artists manage to amass some of the best
feedback because the system is simple to manipulate. Want some nice feedback
without having to actually go through the trouble of giving a buyer a good
experience? Just sell something nonexistent to a friend (you'll do it for
him in return), or to one of your other identities. Do this sort of feedback
"padding" or "surfing" 20 or so times, and you've got
a sterling reputation. Or then there's feedback "trolling," where
you can cheaply build legitimate feedback by selling a few dozen inexpensive
items in an obliging manner. Now you've got a golden identity that can be
used for a big score. It's a classic element in any con game.
Persistently unscrupulous sellers eventually run into buyers who are so honest
(or whose impulse control and need for vengeance are so high) that they leave
bad feedback in spite of the near certainty of retaliation. Does that close
the sellers down? Hardly. True, eBay will at least temporarily boot you off
if your negative feedbacks total four more than your positive feedbacks. But
sleazy sellers rarely let things go that far. As soon as the eBay identity
under which they do business has one or two negative feedback blurbs, they
simply set up shop under one of the many other identities they most likely
maintain. No need to close the old identity down; it can still be useful for
shill bidding and feedback padding.
EBay established a new rule some months ago requiring sellers to provide a
credit card number to cut down on this sort of identity shell game, but by
that time many experienced sellers had already established dozens of identities.
In July, in another rare case of eBay pressing charges against one of its
members, a Chicago man accused of harassing other members was claimed by eBay
to be operating more than 50 identities. Besides, fake or borrowed credit
card numbers aren't all that hard to get hold of.
Auction sites could easily dig a little deeper into their sellers' real identities,
but in keeping with the spirit of the Internet, they bristle at the notion
of the company learning too much about members. That attitude has hamstrung
efforts to detect and crack down on even blatant fraud, notes Delores Gardner
of the Federal Trade Commission. "Nobody wants Big Brother," she
says. "They want to use the least-intrusive means possible."
NONDELIVERY
The worst scam that a seller can run on a buyer is also the simplest: Take
the buyer's payment and don't send anything in return. More than 80% of the
online-auction complaints the FTC receives fall into this category.
A seller who pulls such a blatant rip-off can't expect to get away with it
for long, at least under one identity. So multiple identities are mandatory.
Equally important, the scam artists who do it right go for big kills: Typically,
they'll troll for good feedback for one or more of their identities, then
offer a number of expensive items in a fairly short period of time. To improve
their take, they may also contact several of the non winning bidders to claim
that they have another, identical item available, or that the high bidder
got cold feet. Then they simply stall the increasingly impatient buyers. Under
federal law, sellers have 30 days to deliver the goods. In 30 days, a crook
can collect from dozens, even hundreds, of sellers before disappearing from
the system.
Even after 30 days, who's going to try to hunt them down? Try telling your
local police or your state attorney general's office that you lost $293—the
average online auction loss reported to the National Consumer's League—to
Cloudman6. Kind of makes you forget for a minute that this whole breaking
down of geographical barriers and physical infrastructure was supposed to
be a good thing, doesn't it? Expensive storefronts, back rooms filled with
inventory, employees—maybe these aren't just useless overhead but rather
are indicators of a commitment to legitimate business.
Some sellers go for a lower-key variation on this theme by sending out an
item that's in worse condition or is otherwise less valuable than what was
described in the listing. A particularly egregious example of this came to
light recently in a San Diego courtroom, where eBay is being sued for ignoring
repeated warnings that a ring of sellers was peddling phony sports memorabilia,
ultimately cheating buyers out of $10 million. (It may be indicative of the
general state of affairs in online auctions that eBay claims it didn't take
the warnings seriously because it often receives bogus tips about supposedly
fraudulent behavior from sellers who are simply trying to get a rival seller
into trouble. In other words, the site apparently faces not only ordinary
fraud but fraudulent fraud.)
Buyers aren't completely without defense on eBay. Escrow services, such as
I-Escrow.com, hold buyer payments until the buyer acknowledges that the item
has been received and is as advertised. Scam sellers won't agree to use an
escrow service, of course, but many legitimate sellers won't either because
of the costs—which can be as high as 4% of the sales price—and
the time delays involved, not to mention being put at the mercy of the buyer's
opinion. So insisting on escrow will cut you out of many good auctions.
Many people are convinced they'll be protected if they pay by credit card.
Actually, though, many credit card companies put you through bureaucratic
hell before agreeing to refund your money on a bad purchase, and some won't
even talk to you if your deal was with a private seller. Besides, as with
escrow, legitimate as well as crooked buyers may not accept credit cards.
EBay says it will reimburse burned buyers on items up to $200, minus a $25
deductible. I couldn't think of a legitimate way to test this claim, but in
any case sellers can circumvent even the small chance of being investigated
simply by arranging to close the deal privately, outside of the auction, using
the trick of contacting the second-highest bidder to offer the item. When
the deal is conducted in this fashion, eBay won't have anything to do with
it.
BID SNIPING
It's not just sellers who play games with the system at eBay. Buyers can subvert
the auction process and shortchange sellers by waiting until the final moments
of an auction to shoot in a bid, a process known as bid sniping. EBay's position
on sniping is that it's all part of the fun of online auctions; if you've
got your maximum bid into the proxy system, the company argues, then the only
way you'll lose the auction item is if the last-second bidding goes higher
than your maximum, in which case you would have lost anyway, right?
Wrong. Most experienced buyers on eBay don't like entering their maximum bids
into the proxy system. For one thing, it sets you up for being quickly shilled
to your maximum. For another, it robs you of the opportunity to monitor other
bidders' activity and alter your bidding strategy accordingly. Serious bidders
are no more interested in having a computer dole out their bids than serious
poker players would be in entering their maximum bet into a computer and having
the computer play out the hand. But when snipers enter the picture, bidding
strategies go out the window because you won't have an opportunity to top
the sniper's last-moment bid. The obvious response is to become a sniper yourself.
There are even software programs and Web sites that automate the sniping process,
so you can be at the movies while your last-moment bid is being submitted.
That's why so many eBay auctions involve low bidding throughout, then a flurry
of high bids in the final instant.
A more devious version of bid sniping is known as bid shielding. Here's how
it works: A person puts in a fairly low bid on an item early in an auction,
immediately after which a confederate (or the same person operating through
a second identity) puts in a bid so high that it's unlikely to be topped.
Then, in the final moments of the auction, the confederate retracts his or
her high bid, reestablishing the first person's low bid as the high bid. If
it is timed correctly, no other bidders will have the opportunity to get in
a bid before the close of the auction, leaving the low bid as winner.
FEEDBACK EXTORTION
When you win an auction, you haven't just agreed to buy an item; you've won
the ability to break the seller's reputation on eBay via negative feedback,
warranted or not.
Some buyers take advantage of that power, essentially blackmailing the seller
into renegotiating the deal to the buyer's satisfaction. The buyer, of course,
knows that if the seller holds firm and the buyer carries out his or her threat,
he or she will be trashed in retaliation. But negative feedback tends to be
much more damning for sellers than buyers, so mutually assured destruction
isn't a viable deterrent. That's why legitimate sellers who do a lot of business
on eBay are often quick to cave in to feedback extortionists, typically refunding
some of the payment or sending additional product.
That's what happened to Tom Peace, who handles eBay used car sales for the
Peter Fuller chain of car dealerships in New England. Peace sells an average
of about 60 cars a month on eBay and claims his listings are obsessively honest
about the cars' flaws. For a good reason: He lives in such fear of negative
feedback, he says, that he will do almost anything to keep a customer from
reacting badly, even if it means taking a loss on a sale. "Peter Fuller's
reputation is more important than making money on every car," he says.
That's why when a car dealer in Ohio complained that a car he bought from
Peace lacked an owner's manual, Peace sent him one, even though it hadn't
been promised in the listing. When the buyer later complained that there were
no remotes for the alarm system—a system that had been deactivated and
hadn't been mentioned in the listing—Peace dug up three and shipped
them off, no charge. When the buyer said the spare tire was missing and he
wanted $300 to replace it, Peace sent him a check, even though Peace had personally
noted the spare tire before the car was picked up. When the same buyer said
he found a scratch that Peace was sure hadn't been on the car, and wanted
another $200 back, Peace begged him to give the car back for a full refund.
The man refused, holding out for the money, and threatened to blast Peace
with negative feedback. Peace didn't pay, and the man let loose, even sending
copies of the bad feedback to some of Peace's other online customers. "I've
sent eBay copies of his threatening notes, but they won't do anything,"
says Peace. "And there's no way in hell you can get a human being on
the phone at the company."
BAD PAYMENT
Buyers have some straightforward options for shafting sellers: sending them
bad checks or phony money orders. Most sellers know enough to let paper clear
before shipping off the merchandise. But some sellers, especially those eager
to get that positive feedback from a very friendly sounding buyer, will jump
the gun. From the crooked buyer's point of view, it probably won't hurt to
try. Sellers who wait before shipping usually won't bother to take any action
against the buyer, figuring they'll just sell to the next-highest bidder or
relist the item rather than risking retaliatory feedback. Sellers who find
themselves burned after shipping the item might go after the buyer, but if
the buyer is smart about it, he or she will be hard to track down.
A slightly more subtle ploy is to pay by credit card, receive the item, and
then call the credit card company complaining that the item never arrived.
Some credit card companies will place the burden of proof of delivery on the
seller, and if the seller is paranoid about feedback and isn't being dinged
for too large an amount of money, he or she may just write the whole thing
off.
The most underhanded version of this category of ploy involves switching merchandise
on the seller. Says AuctionWatch's Sales: "A guy breaks the screen on
his Palm Pilot, buys a new one at auction, and then when he gets it he returns
the damaged one and tells the seller it arrived in that condition." Even
escrow may not be able to protect sellers from this trick.
Buyers who pull these sorts of scams can switch identities at will. EBay doesn't
require any sort of ID whatsoever from buyers unless they place a bid of more
than $15,000.
ARE THE VAST SELECTION AND PLENTIFUL BARGAINS on eBay worth having to face
all this sneaky behavior? That's a personal decision. For myself, I figure
that if I can average a 30% discount on the items that I successfully buy
from eBay, which isn't difficult, then if I'm only scammed less than one out
of four times, I'm probably still ahead of the game.
In any case, the online auction situation isn't likely to get much better
in the foreseeable future. Why should eBay change its rules to cut down on
fraud, as it so easily could? The company and other online auction sites thrive
on the perception that they are big, friendly, virtual flea markets, so a
crackdown would almost certainly do more harm than good to that image. Don't
count on regulators to clean up online auctions, either. They've got bigger
fish to fry. According to a Louis Harris survey commissioned by the National
Consumers League, 92% of U.S. adults say they've been hit by scam telephone
offers, a racket that bilks Americans out of $40 billion a year. EBay is barely
a blip on the fraud radar screen in comparison.
So, as eBay exhorts users, trade on! Or, if you can't stomach the thought
of occasionally getting bamboozled, consider this advice: Buy from an established
online retailer. They operate professionally, want to protect their reputation,
and strive to expand their customer base,
also something
usually can be worked out If
you run into a problem.
Forbes editor Michael S. Malone holds shares in eBay.