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What Can You Do When Defrauded on eBay? 382

zeno_lee asks: "About 55 eBay buyers were defrauded by a single high volume ebay seller. I discovered all the victims by backtracking each transaction this guy had for the past month and contacting each one individually. Everyone lost between $400 to $1700 each. I then started an email group to organize action against him and to get our money back. This guy was particularly successful because he had positive feedback ratings before he decided to jump ship. " Systems like eBay are, as most have seen, extremely popular, but the one big shortcoming is that the system only works when buyers can trust the sellers. It's actions like this that break the system and if dishonest sellers can get away with fraud, auction sites will suffer. What options are there when consumers have been frauded on auction websites?

"Most of us followed the proper procedures. You wait 30 days to file a fraud claim on ebay. Then you have the option of getting $175 at most from eBay's insurance. It softens the blow, but for many it's not anywhere close to what they lost. Contacting local authorities hasn't accomplished anything nor has filing with the FBI. Many people who paid via PayPal did get a refund, but others paid via checks.

eBay has been one of the bright spots of the internet. As a NYSE listed company, you'd expect more to be done about helping customers. I hope this question comes as a warning to be more cautious on eBay or not to bid for items on ebay over $400 without escrow protection. I've learned my lesson not to do business with anyone who doesn't use paypal or billpoint. But regardless of what we learned, most of us feel helpless because eBay has not done more to get our money back. Any suggestions?"

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What Can You Do When Defrauded on eBay?

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  • Paypal will only protect you if you pay with a credit card, and then only because you dispute the charge. (Also note that if you dispute a charge, you will get your paypal card yanked, since in essence paypal is now getting stuck with the bill)
    • by soren ( 37670 ) <slashdot@soren.org> on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:38PM (#2443885) Homepage
      I've used paypal numerous times successfully w/o a problem. Whether sending money from my bank account to someone just for the purposes of cash or purchasing on eBay. There was one problem with an eBay transaction. Suffice to say, the guy never fulfilled his obligation and proceeded to not respond for a month, then I notified paypal, they did their investigation and within a week I received a phone call notifying me that they had refunded the $539.00 -- problem solved. I'm not sure whether the guy had his paypal acct. yanked or who knows what action paypal took, but, problem solved on my end. ;)
      • PayPal only refunds the money if they can get it out of the the account of the abuser. If that person has emptied his/her account PayPal will do nothing. I believe the original poster was pointing out that when you buy something with a credit card you have protection. With PayPal you have none.
      • Seller defrauded me on a non-eBay transaction. After 90 days (too late to dispute), I get word from PayPal that they found that the seller was fraudulent, but because their bank account was empty, there was nothing they would do to help. Thanks PayPal.
    • by choprboy ( 155926 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @07:06PM (#2444006) Homepage
      Paypal will only protect you if you pay with a credit card

      Not true! Paypal will cover any transaction, provided you follow some simple and quite obvious steps:
      - Conduct transactions with verified users
      - Ship/send money only to the listed address
      - Use some common sense and not deal with someone who... say..., wants that new computer bought at $300 shipped overnight to a MailBoxes Etc., doesn't care shipping is going to cost $250, and says he's paying with a credit card (which just happens to be in the name of someone else).

      Really, how hard is it to spot things like this? Same thing applies to sellers. Ship to confirmed address and have paperwork/tracking numbers to back up your end of the transaction. I deal on Ebay all the time, people have tried to screw me over, but I take some common sense. In every case, I've either got my money back, or a replacement from the seller.

      Of course, on the other hand, the support systems of both Ebay and Paypal are terrible. It's not uncommon for it to take 4 or 5 days to get an illegal auction cancelled (bulk email addresses) on Ebay, or a month to report a spammer using Paypal as a payment vehicle.
      • I have used PayPal many times, but don't be fooled into thinking there is any protection! I bought an item for $89. (An ATI Radeon Video card) This was ~$20 cheaper than I get get it locally, so paying $9 for shipping didn't seem bad. The problem, they shipped me a card that did not match their description at all. (Not the ATI Radeon, didn't look like the photo, didn't have the features mentioned in the auction, etc.)

        After a month of sending emails and phone calls, of which none were returned, I filed tried to use SquareTrade, this at least got a response but still no fix. I then filed a complaint with PayPal. PayPal looked into it, and a few weeks later sent me a nice email, explaining that yes I had been defrauded, they found 100% in my favor, the refund. $0!! My guess, the seller had disappeared off of PayPal, so no money could be recovered. This was 6 months ago, and I have given up hope in getting anything back. (I was contacted by the District Attorney for Washington state, apparently the seller had started taking money for products and not sending them soon after my problem)
        • Unfortunately, more often true than not. Paypal only really covers outright theft, not disputes of "description" or dissatisfaction. My advice, forget the reccomendations of waiting 45 days, or whatever, and file a notice of dispute immediately (not the formal request for reimbursement). That puts Paypal on notice and they will immdiately flag the account if a couple other simmilar notices come in. And you did exactly the right thing following, call up the local police department and ask to speak with a detective in theft. Fraud and theft is fraud and theft, it doesn't matter whether you live a mile away or a 100 miles away.

    • by (WC)TheBrain ( 467545 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @07:32PM (#2444115) Homepage
      I have been thoroughly screwed on a PayPal transaction, and I'll likely never use the service again over it because of the way PayPal "handled" it.

      I purchased (or should I say, paid for) a GeForce 3 for roughly $400 from a certain merchant [altima2000.com] (that now appears to be defunct, imagine that). They were a verified user on PayPal, everything seemed legit. Two weeks pass and I get nothing, not even a notice of shipping delay. After a whole slew of emails back and forth, finally ending with me buying the card somewhere else and telling them to cancel the order, the "merchant" just stopped responding altogether.

      So I took the matter to PayPal. Their response: "We have investigated your claim and found the seller to be at fault. However, we are unable to recover any funds because the seller's account balance is zero. Thank you, have a nice day."

      What in the blue fsck is that? The fact that I played by every one of their rules, and they even admit I was defrauded by a so-called "verified" seller, and yet still refuse to extend any consumer protection to me, ticks me off even more. The SELLER should be the one biting the bullet, not me. I did my part of the bargain. He didn't.

      So short moral of the story: don't use PayPal to pay for anything you think might have even the most remote chance of going awry. In the end it's no different than sending cash.

      I am still trying to get that $400 back -- apparently the next step is going straight to my bank and disputing the charge, although I hear PayPal loves when people do that. Well, they can have all the love I'm willing to give on the matter, for being oh so helpful with an obvious fraud case.
    • Also note, if the other person has taken the money out of their account, it's too late, you can't get the money from paypal. I was ripped off by someone and that's what they told me after several weeks.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:26PM (#2443804)
    If its more than the insurance limit, escrow all transactions.
  • Ebay (Score:4, Interesting)

    by recursiv ( 324497 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:27PM (#2443810) Homepage Journal
    One particularly notorious action concerned a certain 'haunted' painting. Word quickly spread over the net and attracted 10's of thousands of viewers. You can read the details here [castleofspirits.com].
  • Auction fraud (Score:5, Informative)

    by man_ls ( 248470 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:27PM (#2443813)
    Auction fraud is illegal, I believe there is a way you can file with the FTC and have the fraudelant seller fined thousands of dollars, or even possibly jailed. IIRC, something about interstate commerce, or whatknot. I think you may also get a full refund of the amount of money you were defrauded from, or a portion of the money collected by the FTC in fines; I don't remember which.

    Look in to it.

    JKoebel
    • Re:Auction fraud (Score:5, Informative)

      by schnurble ( 16727 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:31PM (#2443831) Homepage
      Auction fraud is illegal, I believe there is a way you can file with the FTC and have the fraudelant seller fined thousands of dollars, or even possibly jailed. IIRC, something about interstate commerce, or whatknot. I think you may also get a full refund of the amount of money you were defrauded from, or a portion of the money collected by the FTC in fines; I don't remember which.

      Absolutely. Since this is interstate commerce, it falls under the category of Mail Fraud. Contact the postmaster in your area, as well as the FTC. You might also want to seek legal advice (I wouldn't retain a lawyer yet) to get specifics for your locality (and his).

    • IIRC, something about interstate commerce, or whatknot.




      What does IIRC(Intensive Internet Relay Chat) have to do with it?
    • Re:Auction fraud (Score:5, Informative)

      by sigwinch ( 115375 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @07:09PM (#2444023) Homepage
      Auction fraud is illegal, I believe there is a way you can file with the FTC and have the fraudelant seller fined thousands of dollars, or even possibly jailed. IIRC, something about interstate commerce, or whatknot.
      The US FTC [ftc.gov] doesn't usually handle individual consumer complaints. However, they are interested in finding patterns of abuse and ripping new assholes for serial criminals. It might not immediately help, but filing a complaint on their web page only takes a moment. The various Better Business Bureaus [bbb.org] serve a similar function. You can also send complaints to you state/regional Attorney General.
    • Re:Auction fraud (Score:4, Interesting)

      by krenskeoz ( 466753 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @07:19PM (#2444064)
      2 years and 2 months ago a organised group set up several 10-20 article auctions of office 97 pro and came through on the deals for a while too build up confidence. I unfortunately bought a copy (for my father for Christmass) about 2 weeks after they decided to hammer E-bay with several very large volume auctions that they then refused to supply. After 5 months of back and forward garbage with E-Bay, (Including the fact their consumer fraud page failed for around 6 weeks straight with errors.) a complaint was made by another australian through our consulate regarding non delivery after payments were sent through the mail. Not long after I received emails from a special agent NNNNNN requesting all possible information.

      About 14 months ago I was informed a couple had been arrested in Texas on no less than 850 cases of mail fraud as many people had refused to use credit cards but rather used mailed money orders and cheques. I later saw reports in the IT section of our national paper discussing the conviction of a texas couple for E-Bay auction based mail fraud. I assumed that was them. I believe they were given 800 years of jail time, they were to serve a minimum of 5 years with the remainder to run concurrently. The fraud was believed to have netted over $200 000. The whole case was one of the first to actually progress through the courts, as an example. I guess they were lucky, being held in Texas they may or got the chair :)

      When I mentioned it to my father he was a little concerned over them having to do time. How else though would you deter people from doing it again?
      • How else though would you deter people from doing it again?

        Award the amount frauded plus quadruple damages to the victims... Just a suggestion. I don't know what the current limits are, but I doubt the current law allows for that much.
    • From a report dated October 2000 [about.com]:


      As part of the ongoing Internet law enforcement initiative, the FTC has trained more than 700 law enforcement and consumer protection officials from 20 different countries, including 17 federal agencies, 25 state governments and 14 Canadian consumer protection offices in online investigation and law enforcement techniques in locations ranging from Anchorage, Alaska to Paris, France.

      Sounds like these are the boys (and girls) in blue to talk to. This [ftc.gov] is where to find them to file a complaint.

    • Back a Long Time Ago (1997? 98?) someone on eBay was selling non-existant Japanese swords, offering to repair people's swords, taking them and then selling them or simply disappearing, etc. A bunch of us from the sword mailing list and eBay bidders got together and worked to track him down.

      I identified an auction under a new name that was obvious fraud (the image was a link to someone's random web page). He also sent me email claiming to have not know anything about blades using his new email address - but signed it with his real first name, and used technical terms no layperson would know.

      We arranged for the deputy(!) he ripped off to be the winner on the bid and got a snail-mail address from him for the postal order. (We'd tracked him down, but he'd moved to another state, and we needed his new address.) When he tried to pick up his check at the PO box, he was arrested. About a dozen blades were recovered, and he was convicted.

      Banding together made us FAR more able to get action; this was probably one of the earliest arrests of an eBay seller. Of course, things have changed since then I imagine. Back then I bought a $2500 sword via eBay by personal check (and he mailed it before he received payment - the catch is that he knew who I was from the sword community).

      To a certain degree some people on eBay are like people driving around in a van saying "psst: want to get a great deal on some speakers" or "hey, genuine rolex, only $100". Why shuld you trust them? Photos are hardly evidence the item ever existed.
  • eBay has fraud protection [ebay.com] guidelines where they'll reimburse up to $200 of the loss.
  • by JoeShmoe ( 90109 ) <askjoeshmoe@hotmail.com> on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:32PM (#2443838)
    I remember back a couple years ago when eBay frauds were big news...some article was suggesting that whenever possible involve the US Mail system. Have them mail you a quote, or mail payment information or such.

    The thing about it is, mail fraud is a federal crime which much higher penalties than other forms of fraud (Internet fraud being generally unclassified). If you get ripped off online, you can try to complain to your local police, or the police in the criminal's jurisdiction (if you can find it) but you will probably get nothing.

    In you involve the mail system, then the it becomes a federal issue that is tackled by the Office of the Postmaster General and/or the FBI?

    Don't quote me on this, but it would be definitely something to ask your local post office about. If a seller is legit, they should have no problem putting some information on paper and mailing it to you, right?

    Other than that...the other thing that was suggested is use a credit card. Paypal had a big fight with credit card agencies on whether people can dispute Paypal charges for fraudulent auctions, but I seem to remember that the courts came down on the side of consumers (yes they could dispute) forcing Paypal to get insurance.

    Sorry I couldn't find a link, but maybe it helps narrow down your searching?

    - JoeShmoe
    • Mail fraud site (Score:4, Informative)

      by slouie ( 8781 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @07:09PM (#2444021)
      It becomes possible mail fraud if they don't deliver within the time alloted and they don't notify of delays or offer a full refund.

      For details and to file a complaint:

      http://www.usps.com/postalinspectors/fraud/welco me .htm
    • The thing about it is, mail fraud is a federal crime which much higher penalties than other forms of fraud (Internet fraud being generally unclassified).
      Mail is about the same as Internet from a strict legal point of view. The difference is that the Postal Inspectors pay attention to every complaint they receive and they're humorless professional government enforcers with considerable discretionary power. If it goes through the mail, they can kick ass and take names for you. If it doesn't, you are more on your own.
    • by Multics ( 45254 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @07:28PM (#2444103) Journal
      I got whacked by a similar deal. 12 positive feedbacks and then wham, 6 of us were ripped off for HP laser printer parts. Thankfully, TWO of us paid by USPS.

      Between the TWO who paid by USPS we crossed the felony fraud line for them. It took them about 2 months to find him (he skipped his address and skipped on his roommates too). Though all I got back was ebay insurance (so far), USPS PIS did find him and jail him. I've not heard if they'll go for recovering all of our money, but eBay was very friendly with the USPS setting up the case.

      Moral: NEVER PAY BY ANY MEANS BUT USPS. People who only accept PayPal are likely to be trouble because they know that there can't be a USPS inspector knocking on their door if they exclude that mechanisim for payment.

      -- Multics

  • I got screwed out of $400 once on eBay. The guy was using a PayPal account, thankfully. I called my bank and disputed the charges (which I'd paid with my debit card). I guess it helps that my bank is JP Morgan-Chase (the largest in the country), because, within a couple of months, I'd strongarmed my money back into my pocket. All of it.

    It probably depends a lot on your bank/credit card company, but I've been 1-for-1 so far. (I don't intend to try for 2-for-2.)

    - A.P.
    • Yup. My bank is ready to do this for me right now. The company that failed to ship the product I paid for has finally stated that my account should have been credited yesterday (no credit yet...), so if I don't have my money back by tomorrow, I'm disputing the charge through USAA, and am sure they will get my money back for me.
  • by Calle Ballz ( 238584 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:35PM (#2443859) Homepage
    I shop ebay quite often, and though I've had a few bad experiences, I've managed to let them go...

    1. From one seller, in 4 different auctions I bought 4 15" monitors for $25 a piece. Shortly after I sent him a money order for the combined total of the 4 auctions, this guy seemed to disappear off the face of the earth. His user account was cancelled, his email address bounced mail, and his phone number was disconnected. eBay didn't do anything for me at all.

    2. I bought a Cisco 3000 router that claimed to have 16 MB of RAM and 8 MB of Flash (enough to run IOS 12.0). I receieved the product which had barely enough flash & ram to run IOS 9.0 (worthless nowadays). I contacted the seller, he promised to send me the replacement RAM & Flash, he sent me some bunk chips that didn't even fit in the device. After numerous other emails and phone calls with no answers, I finally gave up. ebay didn't do anything for me on this one either.

    3. I won an auction for a bootleg TOOL video. I sent the guy the $14 total, and I never received a product. Apparently this guy screwed over 4 other people bidding on the same item from him, we all left negative feedback. This time the amount was not enough for ebay to care.

    Each time I filled out one of ebay's fraud reports, and never EVER got a response. Since these losses weren't too important, they were all things I never really needed, just impulse buys that would have ended up sitting in a corner taking space, I don't really fret over it. Plus, if you believe that the grand scheme of things fits together in one huge orchestrated puzzle that meshes together... they'll get what's coming to them.
    • by MadCow42 ( 243108 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:53PM (#2443952) Homepage
      I'll sell you and each of your friends a bridge that they can call their own for the meer sum of $25 each.

      After I've defrauded you on this, you won't feel the need to pursue it personally, because after all it's only $25. This is great, because I can now go and defraud the next guy, and eventually become a millionaire.

      The point is, "these losses weren't too important" just don't cut it. You have some sort of responsibility to ensure that these people don't f**k over other people too. If everyone just rolls over because it's too much hassle, they'll never stop because it's profitable.

      Please, for OUR sake, do NOT forget about these types of things, and pursue them as hard as possible, no matter how trivial $25 or whatever seems to you.

      Thanks,
      MadCow.
      • I leave my bad feedback. But I don't have the time, money or resources to pursue action like this. In the case of the router, this guy, because he had enough complaints against him had his account cut off. The guy with the monitors, apparently did something because his account was killed before I got a chance to leave my own 2 cents.

        In the case of the guy selling me the tooltape, I eventually got a copy of the entire video on the internet for free, and I figure 5 negative feedbacks all in a row for one account is a good sign you have a deadbeat seller.

        What goes around comes around, but when I take a gamble (what I consider every ebay transaction) and I lose, I will not waste my life for a small amount of money.
      • The guy

        1) left bad feedback on the sellers,
        2) filled out fraud reports, and
        3) finally moved on.

        What exactly is he supposed to do? Track down the sellers, shave their cats, and blow up their houses? Realistically, you take a risk when you use eBay, and it's probably best attenuated by using PayPal/Billpoint and merchant agreements to insure yourself.
    • What is ebay supposed to do for you, exactly, other than factilitate the auction. All Ebay can do, at most, is provide contact info, or yank the guy's account. That's it. They are not part of the financial transaction.

  • The system works (Score:5, Informative)

    by CmdrTroll ( 412504 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:36PM (#2443867) Homepage
    If you pay by credit card, you will not have to pay for fraudulent charges because it is the merchant's burden of proof to show that you got what you paid for. Almost all banks are extremely sympathetic to customers who are victims of fraud, because banks (who make about 2% commission on every single purchase on your card, in addition to interest) want to keep you as their customer. They don't have any reservations about sticking it to a bad merchant. And yes, if you paid through PayPal, you can still dispute the charge and win (regardless of what PayPal tries to tell you). I've done it before - because PayPal's customer service takes weeks to respond and my bank (MBNA) is much faster and nicer.

    If you paid by check or money order, though, you're just plain silly. Just because a seller has a fancy auction page or a good feedback rating doesn't mean you should send a check for $400-1000 to a total stranger somewhere else in the country and expect the seller to make good on it. Where's your common sense? People get busted for that all of the time and auction sites account for the majority of fraudulent online activity. So think before you pay next time, and good luck getting your money back.

    -CT

  • by Dr. Zowie ( 109983 ) <slashdot@defores t . org> on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:36PM (#2443873)
    Escrow services like Tradenable [tradenable.com] (formerly i-escrow) and even Billpoint [billpoint.com] let you trust the largish corporation (which has much more incentive not to cut and run) instead of the seller. When buying anything over $100, I always use escrow. Sure it costs a couple of bucks more, and there's a tiny amount of added hassle (you have to go back to the web site to verify that the stuff arrived on time), but the security is great and the service really isn't very expensive.

    On several occasions, shady-sounding individuals have backed out of auction deals with me, after I suggested using Tradenable. To me, that's the surest sign of a huckster and a good indication that escrow works.

    • had my first experience with escrow. went positively.

      went privately for a purchase (almost $3k camera) after bidding on it on ebay and having my bid NOT take for some reason (my bidBastard(tm) auction assistant must've failed me - darn!).

      for such a large sum, I would never have done this without an escrow. was able to pay that day via credit card, have him ship it the next day, and I got it the day after that. all was well. for anything over a few hundred $$, escrow is the way to go.

  • my wife always has the item shipped, and then we pay.
    • by napir ( 20855 )
      And how does this protect the seller from being defrauded by the buyer? I've been selling on eBay for several years, and there's no way I would ship the item to a buyer before I received payment.
  • by TheEviscerator ( 240966 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:39PM (#2443889) Homepage
    I'd try bidding with a username like "Tony Soprano", or "Michael Corleone". I'm guessing that people would think twice about defrauding you.
  • by Ted V ( 67691 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:43PM (#2443911) Homepage
    The problem with reputation is that it's just so easy to buy! Lets say I go place 20 bids on random crap and my $1 bid wins. Hey, I just got 20 points of reputation for $20! Then I can sell the crap back for maybe $.50 and I have 20 more points worth of reptuation! For literally $10 (and some free time), you can get 40 reputation points from ebay. The whole reputation system is flawed because untrustworthy people are allowed to give out good feedback. Who says that just because someone was honest with a $1 transaction that you can claim they are a "Good trader, very prompt"? What do you know about whether that person is really honest? Yet people give all the feedback to others because they want good feedback in turn.

    Listing how much money was spent as part of the feedback doesn't really help either. Just set up a ring of ebay accounts, bid on each other's stuff, and have it sell for higher values. Sure, ebay gets a small cut, but all you're really doing is buy reputation from ebay which you use to screw other people. Suppose I forge $5000 of transactions on ebay and they take 3%. I just bought an enormous amount of reputation (trustworthy for $5000 in transactions) for $167. It shouldn't be that hard for an unethical person to go make $500/scam off of 20+ people.

    Lets face it... Reputation doesn't mean anything.

    -Ted
    • But the quality of reputation matters - before I buy anything, I look to see what they have sold before (as a seller). If all they've sold is $1 items, why would I trust a $1000 purchase with them? The only way I'd even consider it is escrow, and even they it'd have to be an amazing deal to consider it.

      Still, there's no reason you can't sell $1000 items for a while and then gyp a whole lot of people for $1000... it's a danger but I agree with those that say anything over $100 you should probably buy through escrow (though I'll admit I've bought a lot more expensive items than that without escrow).
    • by choprboy ( 155926 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @07:22PM (#2444078) Homepage
      The problem with reputation is that it's just so easy to buy! Lets say I go place 20 bids on random crap and my $1 bid wins

      Well, gee... Your saying maybe we ought to look at the actual circumstances of the transaction rather then some overall number? Anybody who does Ebay business regularly should look at the seller's actual auctions. More than once I found deadbeats trying to build up feedback like this. Usually a ring of new accounts, all selling ridculous things like "Used condom" or "Banana peal" for $0.01 that closed 5 minutes after it opened with the "Buy it Now" feature. Easy... report them, accounts closed, move on with life.

      Just set up a ring of ebay accounts, bid on each other's stuff, and have it sell for higher values

      Well, that's a good idea too, it's called "Shill bidding" and it's against the rules. Again, by looking at the actual auctions you can easily detect this. Don't just look at the feedback of the seller, look at the feedback of those who left the seller's feedback, and the feedback of those who left the feedback of those who left feedback. Are they all the same people? Are they all new users whose account were all created the same day? If so, it's a pretty obvious clue there's some fraud going on.

      Most criminals aren't very smart, instead they just rely on others being dumber than they are.
    • The whole reputation system is flawed because untrustworthy people are allowed to give out good feedback.

      Err, you are lacking a base case without this! (the trusted people have to come from somewhere!!!)

      Maybe a system where it is hard to gain trust and easy to lose is better. Kinda like TCP windows. Trust is gained point at a time, but lost by half. That way, one person with a complaint can really blow the whistle on a bad guy.

      This would put the cost of scamming up quite a bit assuming each ripped off person provides the negative feedback.

    • the real problem is that ebay has a broken reputation system (as you've made obvious).

      If it were done as a trust network [advogato.org] it would be much more meaningful.

      Weight the trust passed on to people you certify (via feedback) using both the value of the item and the trust of the certifier.

      A more useful metric of how trust worthy someone is would then be based on a combination of:

      1. the number of items sold
      2. the cost of the items sold
      3. the trustworthiness of those who certified you

      Do this and keep seperate ratings for buying and selling and enjoy the results!

    • Yeah, it's pretty easy to pad feedback on eBay... You have to look for other signs that they're a trusted seller, other than the feedback, like actually looking at the actual auctions - if they're all 50 cent items and you're planning on buying a 2x800 G4 from the guy, somethings going on... if you don't smell fish, you better go take some decongestants.

      There are a couple of other things that you can do, too. There's a pretty reputable company out there called SquareTrade [squaretrade.com] that has a Seal that certifies sellers as legitimate. I doubt they can do anything is a situation of fraud, but they do dispute resolution too. They do some pretty extensive checking on sellers... plus they have a fraud protection guarantee so that you're protected against fraud for an additional $250 (over eBay's amount). I think they also have somewhere on their site where you can search for items being sold on eBay by their members, but i forget where it is.

      *the tide is right for cowsurfing*
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:44PM (#2443916)
    It is just this type of naivete that allows so many people to get ripped off on Ebay. PayPal does not protect you. The only way they will refund is if the seller cannot prove delivery (and only in the US). And the seller can send you a rock and PayPal is fine with that!

    The Ebay $200 insurance is a joke. You only have a chance to get $175 back and that's only when you spend many hours with their stupid hard-to-use forms . Ebay it self favors Ebay not the protection of buyers or sellers.

    Same goes for the way Ebay removes Microsoft auctions. They are in bed with Microsoft so what else would you expect?

    Escrow services work most of the time but they are not cheap or guaranteed. Bottom line if you can't afford to lose it don't buy on online auctions.

  • by chhamilton ( 264664 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:44PM (#2443917)
    Perhaps eBay should take a step forward here and make escrow transactions standard. If eBay itself would act as the escrow agent, and build it into their infrastructure, everybody wins. Typically, escrow fees are pretty tiny, and in reality, they make sense for most transactions.

    If eBay set up a decent, reliable, and affordably priced system and made it inherent in the auction process, the masses would follow.

    • This is a good idea, especially with items over a certain limit. However, with small items (ie, those with low bids - I know there is a difference between a 10 caret diamond and a bolt) the fees would have to be adjusted accordingly.

      One thing about escrow - doesn't the third party have to hold the item while waiting for the money (or vice versa, depending on which arrives first)? If that is the case, then EBay would need a large warehouse as well as inventory tracking just to keep things straight - and then there is always the possibility that things could be "lost" in escrow (sticky fingered employees) - hopefully that could be cut to the minimum (security and insurance mostly)...
  • by aussersterne ( 212916 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:47PM (#2443927) Homepage
    What about all of the bad buyers?

    I both buy and sell on eBay. I've stopped listing auctions with the BuyItNow! option because too many of my auctions have been ended when a brand new bidder (i.e. someone who joined eBay within the last couple of days) comes and uses BuyItNow! to end the auction, then disappears completely and is never heard from/never logs into eBay again. Negative feedback doesn't help in this case, because these bidders inevitably have a feedback of zero or at best one and don't care if they lose one point.

    Even without BuyItNow, I've had a number of auctions close and then never heard from the high bidder again, forcing me to relist and costing me time and money. In the worst case, one of my auctions closed at just over $300, the buyer e-mailed me a simply said "I changed my mind I don't want it sorry" and when I left negative feedback saying so, I of course got the retaliatory "FRAUD! Took my money and never delivered!" feedback. Legal action got the feedback removed, but that cost me as well.

    I think that eBay should require a bank account number as a pre-requisite for buying or bidding. You agree when you join that if you default on a bid or if you are accused by n people of fraud, your assets will be frozen until the situation can be resolved and those involved can get the money owed to them.
    • Yahoo auctions here in Japan (I don't know about in the US, sorry) now require a credit-card number as a prerequisite for both posting and bidding on items, as the direct result of a rash of auction fraud incidents.
    • I agree with you that there is a problem, but I don't see freezing assets as a solution. eBay, like it or not, is not seen as being as "legitimate" as say, an auction house. It's more like the internet classifieds. Doing business on eBay implies a certain risk, though I do think eBay should have some sort of protection for the seller (as in not charging them a fee) if the buyer bails. There's a certain culture to eBay (look at the wording on the feedback ratings, you'll know what I mean) that just oozes "take with a grain of salt." eBay is "buyer beware" more than anything else.
    • I'm interested in hearing about how "Legal action got the feedback removed..." Could you give some details of how you did this? Who did you take action against? Ebay, or the other party?
    • True, but what about the rash of people who want you to paypal to a hotmail address? There's no way I'm paypaling to a hotmail address, espescially when half these people don't even respond to emails. I'm under no obligation to buy from somebody who doesn't answer emails.
  • by sphealey ( 2855 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:47PM (#2443930)
    For any significant amount of money on eBay I send the postal money order by U.S. Mail. The penalties for mail fraud are quite severe and the post office does like to investigate reports of same.

    See if any of the buys used the U.S. Mail and/or a postal money order. If so, have that person or persons file a complaint with the postmaster of their zip code, and have him reference the other cases that you have dug up.

    sPh
    • I agree - I believe sending a postal money order thru the US mail (NOT the private carriers) offers better protection than so-called 'safe' things like billpoint and paypal.

      mail fraud is serious. might take time to resolve, but its better to have the US govt fighting for you than some uninsured company (yes thats right, paypal is not a bank and they don't conform to FDIC style rules).

      also, ensure that you're not dealing with a minor! I once bought a cpu from a kid (not knowing it was a kid) via ebay. he promised it was going out, promised again, etc. weeks went by. I contacted others who bought from him and they also didn't get their stuff. I did get his phone number from ebay and his mommy answered the call. said her little baby wouldn't EVER do anything wrong... threatened small claims (we're in the same state, calif.) and he finally shipped the damned cpu. when I notifed ebay that he had 'borrowed' his mommies credit card to register for ebay, they promptly cancelled his account. sheesh, you'd have thunk they'd verify this before giving him the account!

      buyer beware was never truer than on ebay.

  • by dpease ( 470976 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:47PM (#2443931)
    I'm not sure what eBay is legally--or even morally--obligated to do in this instance. You knew the risks, and eBay spells them out in their user agreement. Look at it from their point of view: they spell out the risks that you take, and their liability, in black and white. It'd be nice if they'd hire a private dick to track this scumbag down and sell him off to some slaver for the money he owed all of you, but that's not a reasonable way for a company to respond, NYSE listing or not.


    The scope we're talking about here is such that you can't expect local and federal authorities to burn lots of man-hours bringing you justice. You've done the right thing by reporting the incident, and perhaps something will come of it.


    As others have said, the number one best idea for buying big-ticket items over eBay is to use credit, because of those great limited liability clauses. If someone doesn't take credit (or PayPal), you've got to ask yourself how much you'll be hurting if your money wings off through the mail and the item never comes.


    Good luck.

    • I agree that it is unclear if eBay should have any responsibility here.

      But if you think they do, and you think they have not fulfilled that responsibility, write a letter outlining your case, and how you think it should be resolved. Put the letter on paper with a physical signature. Address the letter to the Chairman of the Board of eBay, with a copy to the chairman of the Audit Committee if he is a non-employee director, or to the senior non-employee director if he is not (I think the audit committee must be non-employees but not sure). Mail the letters US Mail, registered, return receipt requested.

      Note that you are unlikely to get any action anyway. But a registered letter to the Audit Committee must be logged and reviewed by someone, so you at least have a bit of a chance.

      sPh
  • by Lawmeister ( 201552 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:48PM (#2443935) Homepage
    Found this on webmastertechniques.com [webmastertechniques.com]


    Less than 66% of internet users have not been a victim of online fraud... Per victim, the price of fraud hovers around $600, which is more than most research estimates of average online retail spending.


    What this means is that 34% of all internet users have been screwed over (if you believe their report). Show me another industry that has that high a fraud rate - there isn't, why? 'cause the Fed's would come down hard.


    This just isn't acceptable.

  • by tinrobot ( 314936 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:50PM (#2443940)
    That is some serious fraud. I would imagine that EBay would have a vested interest in prosecuting this guy to the fullest extent because he lessens the value of their product. Defrauding 55 people is also a federal crime because it crosses state lines. I'm sure the FBI should be notified as well.
  • Do what I did... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by BoarderPhreak ( 234086 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:52PM (#2443951)
    I reported him to the following agencies:

    - United States Postal Service
    - Internet Fraud Center
    - FBI
    - Discover Card
    - Ebay
    - Billpoint
    - PayPal

    This guy is currently wishing he never heard of me, with several charges levelled against him, including:

    - Mail fraud
    - Credit card fraud
    - Grand larceny
    - Plus the fact this was all interstate, making it worse.

    I also tracked his ass down using every known resource on the Internet, and ended up with his home address, home phone, AERIAL PHOTOS OF HIS HOUSE and more...

    Needless to say, my money has been safely returned and he's in a world of shit. Sorry, asshole.
  • by YouAreFatMan ( 470882 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:53PM (#2443953) Homepage
    Sure, I know him. I tried to purchase "The Truth" from his auction. It never showed up. The price was just too good to be true. Then he sold me 12 kilo of primo mexican brown. This time, all I got was a 25-lb bag of flour. Then I bought a human kidney from him. I didn't need it, but hey, you don't want to wait on one of those lists. Never arrived.

    I'm beginning to wonder if there are any good deals left on ebay...

  • by greygent ( 523713 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:56PM (#2443966) Homepage
    I just got done with a fraud battle on Ebay and this page was of immense help, and eventually got me my full money back from the bastard who tried to swindle me:

    http://www.mindspring.com/~bookdealers/ripoff.ht ml

    Pay particularly close attention to the sections on reporting the fraud to the IFCC section of the FBI, and the Postal Inspector fraud complaint form.

    In the postal inspector's case, when you file a fraud report, they notify the person that they're being investigated. This led to me promptly getting a $600 money order from the criminal in question. They actually had the money order to me in a day, and it cost them $25 to mail it. File reports galore, and try to get as much information about the person that you can.
  • by dgb2n ( 85206 ) <dgb2n@yTWAINahoo.com minus author> on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @06:59PM (#2443977)
    I had a bad experience on a $150 item (cell phone).

    The seller answered email immediately until I verified that I sent payment (he insisted on a money order). After that, he wouldn't answer email and his Ebay account was cancelled.

    I didn't take it laying down. I started by running a reverse lookup on his mailing address to get his phone number. Sure enough, that was disconnected. His email didn't bounce so I emailed him and informed him that I was contacting the local police department. I contacted the local police department and it turned out they'd had two complaints against the guy.

    All of a sudden he appeared back and said that the "shipment must have been delayed". 5 days later the phone arrived postmarked the day after I notified the Police.

    Auction fraud is fraud. Report it and hound them into the ground.
  • by hyrdra ( 260687 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @07:02PM (#2443987) Homepage Journal
    Seriously, this isn't a product plug and I know Capital One isn't the best credit card company to ever exist, but I have been defrauded a few times on eBay, and each time I have used my Capital One credit card through PayPal. Capital One has an online protection program and all you have to do is call them up and explain the situation. They sometimes ask you to fax or e-mail documents and then they stop the charge by doing a charge-back.

    The process is completly transparent, and Capital One fraud investigators then automatically take over if, neccessary. They know you don't HAVE to pay the bill, and most people won't if they have been the victim of a fraud.

    The key is to do it quick, e.g. if you suspect you are dealing with a fraud, (e.g. "I just shipped it."), stop the charge. The worse that could happen is there will be a delay. Another option would be to stop the posting of the charge, but keep the charge. In this way, the seller is still guaranteed the funds because they are set aside for them, but they don't actually have them in their hands.

    This has worked good, and is why you should NEVER transfer money from your checking or bank account, because it's much EASIER to get credit back than your *real* money. PayPal says a bank transfer is the prefered method, and with good reason because they don't end up eating the cost when one their accounts commits fraud. You do.
  • Since the people who paid by check are the ones who lost out, then get the USPS involved. This is presuming that they mailed checks. Mail fraud is a big thing for them, since it gives them a chance to flex their muscle.


    Also, go to the FBI and mention RICO. The feds may take his computer.

  • Use a credit card to make the purchase. I don't buy anything from a vendor who doesn't take plastic or use a service that does.
  • When a seller disappears without sending merchandise out that's already been paid for, it's a terrible thing for the people who've lost money. If the seller took the money and ran, it's also illegal.

    But please, folks, keep in mind this happened before eBay and it'll keep on happening.

    Retailers go under all the time, and they often take customers' money with them. Sometimes the officers will cut and run with the cash, too. Other times they simply went bankrupt and couldn't deliver what they promised.

    A retailer can usually make more money keeping things together for a few months than it can by stealing and running away, so logically there's no reason to oommit theft. Unfortunately humans aren't always logical.
  • by bagman ( 28921 )
    Given the dollar amount involved, I think you have a great chance of finding an attorney who will take your case.

    Many states have consumer protection statutes that allow recovery of multiple damages and attorney's fees. Although this guy may not be a "business" for purposes of these statutes, the number of transactions involved makes for a decent argument that he is subject to consumer protection statutes.

    Also, if what he did really constitutes fraud, he may have committed at least two predicate acts (wire fraud) for federal RICO purposes. Federal law provides for civil damages for RICO violations, along with treble damages and the all important "cost of the suit, including a reasonable attorney's fee." 18 U.S.C. 1964(c).

    Find yourself a good commercial litigator and go to town on this guy.
  • Anyone who thinks that using Paypal protects you,.. is completley wrong. I have a close friend who was defrauded to the tune of $2,000 and paid via paypal. Paypal says they can not help him and the credit card company will not remove the charge. So be careful out there people. You could really loose some money if the seller decides to skate.
  • I was defrauded (Score:2, Informative)

    by lanner ( 107308 )
    I, along with a bunch of other people, were defrauded by a business with an eBay ID of bayco.

    It looks like feedback for this user is still around. You can see the feedback.
    http://cgi2.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewFe ed back&userid=bayco

    Basically, what happened was this person was selling RAM and processors. Selling more than hey had in stock, and buying after they have received funds from the buyers. Then RAM prices rose dramatically. Whoops, not enough money to buy the parts we promised to the buyers. Screwed.

    This was also a case of a user with a preexisting high feedback rating, suddenly going bad. The buyers could not have helped the situation by researching on the seller.

    Do I blame eBay for this? NO!!! I support eBay. They are just a trading marketplace, I would not want to endanger them or make their lives more difficult by trying to blame this on anyone other than myself, or the bad seller. This would cause problems that would make eBay !eBay.

    I believe the San Jose police got in on the case, and they requested eMails from a lot of us asking to document our experience. I think I have that eMail around somewhere still, but am not willing to dig it up right now.

    I got repayment through eBay's insurance system. I finally got a check from Loyds of London some time afterwards.

    Bottom line; bad seller, not my fault, not eBay's fault, sellers's fault, seller is responsible. You sent a check somewhere, go find them, enter their home during the night, and cut off their testicles with a dull rusty butter knife.
    Problem solved!
  • I just read a post about a guy who got ripped off and was able to involve the Postal Inspectors. After 2 months, the asshole got thrown in jail. I never knew something like that could happen; how wonderful. I mean, I knew that the laws existed, but I didn't think that individuals could actually get nailed by them, and I don't think very many people do either.

    I encourage anyone who has similar incidents to post them here; the existence of this story could prove a valuable deterrent that we can all utilize in the future. The next time you mail off a check and don't hear back from the guy, fire off an e-mail like this:

    "Hi there! I noticed you haven't responded to my prior e-mails and I still have not received the item in question. It may interest you that, should you take my money and run, you have committed mail fraud, and which is a federal offense punishable by jail. And guess what -- it's actually enforced! (Link to this story.) I will report your name and address to the postal inspector in my area in five business days if I do not hear back from you."
    Or something along those lines.
  • He should be traceable. The authorities in the area that the checks were cashed should assist the buyers.
  • I'm also a victim :( (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Cloud K ( 125581 )
    I have also been a victim of EBay fraud. Probably not from the same person, since this one was in the UK. (I can't give any more details out YET for legal reasons - I'm in the middle of a claim. But believe me, when this is over he will be exposed to the extent available under the law)

    I tried to buy a Siemens mobile phone, which ended up over £50, sent the cheque to the seller, and he never sent the item. Repeated emails were ignored. His phone number was invalid.
    VERY annoying.

    When he first started, he had a negative feedback rating, but it was only one comment about not accepting Escrow (he claimed that he didn't know it defaulted to accepting it.) That should've set off alarm bells I guess, but I gave him the benefit of the doubt since it was such a minor issue, bidded and won.

    More interestingly, after the end of the transaction, he gained positive feedback. That's one good thing out of it anyway, since you can't claim fraud insurance from someone with negative feedback.
    What confuses me is HOW he got the positive feedback. They were all from people who seem to have a good reputation too - some with stars next to their names.
    So it doesn't make sense! Why would they praise him/her? Yet I'm 99% sure it's fraud - he gives a different name and address in his profile, the phone number is invalid, and he stopped replying to emails the moment I started questioning him on why the package hadn't arrived.

    Maybe some of these criminals set up more than one account, and bid highly on each other... then add positive feedback to each other's accounts (without exchanging items or money of course).
    In which case, the feedback system is total bull that means nothing whatsoever.

    I really don't trust EBay now.
    Any better suggestions?
  • And you're sure that this was fraud and not some sort of freak accident, seller-in-the-hospital sort of thing? There has been many posts here on how to nail the seller, but I guess I would ask how you're sure? In the same situation, I'd try every possible avenue to have voice contact with the offending party. Emails & email adresses are often broken/changed/or misunderstood.

    Then, assuming due diligence,

    http://crs.ebay.com/aw-cgi/ebayisapi.dll?crsstar tp age

    That's eBay's fraud report form.

    I had a problem of a seller not shipping and did the same sort of backtracking to find other victims. After using eBay's seller info and some Anywho [anywho.com] research, I was able to track down the seller directly. Faced with that information and the prospect of group action, I got the seller to finally provide what they had sold. The key was just starting the "machinery" promptly and as completely as possible. YMMV
  • Class Action (Score:3, Informative)

    by Deadric ( 13491 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @08:30PM (#2444431)
    About a year and three months ago I purchased a Porsche 944 off of ebay. And although I was promised a warrenty, the company who handeled the guys warrentys would not provide one for my car. I had transmission problems, muffler problems, air conditioner problems, and brake problems. I had finally given up when a representative from the state of New Jersey called me and informed me they were orgonizing a Class Action Lawsuit against the individual who sold me my car.

    This seems the way to go, collect information about the one individual, and bring it to the state. I happen to be fortunate because he forged my signiture several times when providing documents to the state, so I have a very strong case, so perhaps people might not have as good luck as I do.

    The downside is I provided all of this information to the state, and it has still been 10 months, and I have not got word on how the case is progressing.
    • About a year and three months ago I purchased a Porsche 944 off of ebay.

      I have absolutely nothing against you (heck, I don't even know you), but that sentence alone tells me that you got what you had coming without even needing to read the rest of your post.

      For purchases of that magnitude, one would have to be a few sandwiches short of a picnic, so to speak, to make such a purchase via an online auction (except, for example, if purchasing the vehicle from a manufacturer-authorized new-car dealership who was making the sale online).

      In my opinion, anything purchased from an online auction site for over $100 should be paid for through a company like Tradenable [tradenable.com] to avoid being bent over and sodomized with an 80-grit sandpaper dildo by a dishonest seller!
  • by thype ( 93144 )
    Unfortunately, this is the truth. I was a culprit of this a year ago. The FTC would do nothing, there was nothing for me to do. The actuall positive remarks on the seller were from freinds that were doing the same thing. They would just make stuff up about one another. The postive remarks were from freinds they "sold" items too, which the items actually did not exist. Then they would pull one big scam on the public and get out quick. This is just a tricky market to purchase goods in, at least as far as I can tell. If you get screwed, there really is no one to help you.
  • Here's what you do: Go get a bunch of free e-mail accounts. Create a bunch of e-bay accounts with this free e-mail account. Hold auctions for stuff nobody is going to buy and do this from 1 single account. From each of those other free accounts, bid on your $1.00 crap. When you win, give yourself a bunch of good feedback. You're an instant hit.

    It may be time consuming, but to swindle people for $400-$1700 per fraud, you're looking at a pretty good take for your effort.

    I got outbid on a fraud auction. Shortly before I got outbid, I got suspicious and discovered this guy had tons of auctions ranging greatly in what the items were and the costs. Many were dutch auctions. Before he finished his first auction, I got together a group of high bidders, pointed out what I saw and over the next few days, one of the guys in the group said he lived near the address being advertised. He checked it out and confronted the guy.

    Poor bastard wouldn't back down. Those who actually ended up sending him money filed for mail fraud with the USPS. It wasn't long before he found himself in court. So, go to the USPS would be my advice. They take this stuff seriously and don't make you wait for satisfaction.
  • Report Fraud Here (Score:3, Informative)

    by truesaer ( 135079 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @09:07PM (#2444602) Homepage
    If you are defrauded online, you should report at this website:


    IFCC FBI Complaint Center [ifccfbi.gov]


    One of their prime purposes is to handle online fraud.

  • Bought a (not new) TiVo in spring from a seller named joscaro2. He didn't claim it was new, but said it was "as new", so it definitely was meant to be in working order. When it arrived, it didn't work. Kept freezing during setup. I called him the first time, and he claimed he never actually used it--bought it, then decided to get a Sony instead while still in the box. Yeah right. It turns out he bought it off ebay also (also used). Anyway, he wouldn't answer subsequent phone calls, despite me being curteous that first time. So I left him a message saying that I'll take up the matter with ebay and PayPal. Right away he responded to my ebay feedback saying that I left threats.

    PayPal takes 30 days to follow up an incident, during which time they give the seller a chance to respond. The guy never answered their emails and calls, so they decided in my favor. Which amounted to exactly squat: they said that they can't refund the money, and that's it. Period.

    Moral of the story: I won't spend any sums on ebay that I couldn't live with losing. Which basically means amounts considerably under $100, preferably around $25 or so. Any more than that, and I pretty much want to see a shirt that I could grab in anger.

    PS Philips serviced my TiVo for $140, so I wasn't completely out of that money. But I ended up spending definitely more than retail.
  • by mindstrm ( 20013 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2001 @10:13PM (#2444839)
    People are thinking this needs to be E-bay's problem to solve. It just ain't so. That's typical of today's society... 'someone solve my problems for me'.

    Look how many valid transactions are on ebay. How many dollars worth of commerce. What percentage of those are fraudulent? Anyone? I'm willing to bet it's extremely small.

    I just fail to see how anyone can expect ebay to take care of it. It's very, very clear that ebay is merely factilitating the auction, for a fee from the seller. Everything else, including payment and product delivery, is between buyer and seller directly, unless they chose otherwise. There are plenty of escrow services available for a fee already. Ebay does not need ot make it 'mandatory'.
  • File suit (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Animats ( 122034 ) on Thursday October 18, 2001 @12:54AM (#2445289) Homepage
    So file suit. If you don't know who the seller really is, you can name them as "John Doe", and get the court to issue a supoena requiring eBay or PayPal to disclose all identity information they have on the seller. In California, Small Claims Court goes to $10,000, so that's one way to go. eBay and PayPal are both in California, so you can sue there. Get the Nolo Press book on California Small Claims Court for instructions and forms.

    It takes some time, but you can use legal process to make ISPs, Mail Boxes Etc, credit card companies, and the USPS disclose identity info.

  • FBI and ebay (Score:3, Informative)

    by supabeast! ( 84658 ) on Thursday October 18, 2001 @01:52AM (#2445458)
    The FBI has a unit that handles nothing but online auction fraud. They are notorious for handling auction fraud quickly and seriously, but due to the sheer volume of cases they probably have a hard time getting to everyone. Poke around at the FBI until someone puts you in contact with these people.
  • My Experience (Score:4, Interesting)

    by BenEnglishAtHome ( 449670 ) on Thursday October 18, 2001 @08:54AM (#2446088)

    The original poster has come up with about the best way I can think of to get back at some of the slime who defraud others through eBay - contact other victims and organize.

    Example? My ex-brother-in-law, a complete slime, sold coins through eBay. The coins were either overgraded by him or not delivered at all. Eventually, through the tireless efforts of his ex-wife, my sister, a wonderful woman who you just don't want to piss off and who was determined to pay him back for his theft of several hundred thousand dollars worth of her property as well as his bigamy, the authorities in Texas began to take notice. She organized the victims, put them in touch with the detective handling the complaints, and prodded them to support the lengthy prosecution process.

    He was eventually charged with 42 counts of felony fraud. Last week, he made a deal with the prosecutors. He made full monetary restitution to all 42 victims, got his charges reduced to class A misdemeanors for fraud, plead guilty to those misdemeanors, and was sentenced to 6 months probation. As a result, he's lost his precious license to carry a concealed handgun and his life will be tied to the whims of his probation officer for quite a while. For a guy like him who can't stand any structure in his life, that puts him just one slip-up away from a parole vioation and jail time. I'm looking forward to it. Timeline from first victim to final disposition: about three years.

    My advice: The law can work. You just have to be patient and motivated.

  • by orbital3 ( 153855 ) on Thursday October 18, 2001 @11:26AM (#2446838)
    I won an auction from Yahoo auctions a while back from a guy who had something like a 300 feedback rating. "Great!" I thought, "No chance of getting ripped off here!" I place my bid, win the auction, and then I notice, the guy had, I don't remember exactly, but somewhere between 80-100 negative feedbacks with about 400 or so positive feedbacks. he had ripped off 20-25% of his customers, but by sheer volume managed to obtain an incredibly high rating.

    My auction was for a video card, and it was like, $35+$10 shipping. And my case wasn't all that bad, it was supposed to be "new in box" but it obviously wasn't. The box was cut up, will all UPC info, and even some of the specs cut off. The card was in an open static bag, and the "brand new" manual bad was taped back together. I complained, and the guy claimed he just opened it to make sure it worked ok, but it was obviously BS. But, the card did work, and it _was_ actually the right card and all, so I didn't bother filing any official complaints or anything.

    Other people's auctions were things like "untested, as-is hard drives". Of course the guy had tested them, because among a lot of 10 or 20, not a single one would be good. The guy's responses to his negative feedback were things like "I said it's as-is, what do you expect?".

    Here's another flawed aspect of auction feedback ratings though. I have a 118 positive feedback rating on ebay, with no neutrals or negatives. I have a 1 positive feedback rating on yahoo, 2 positive, 1 negative. What's my negative from? This guy. I, of course, left negative feedback, and the bad seller, in retailation, left negative feedback for me. I don't think I'd ever leave negative feedback for anyone on ebay, because I KNOW they'd leave negative feedback for me as retribution, and it would ruin my perfect reputation. That's a really crappy situation, and I'm sure I'm not the only one who's dealt with it.

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