05-30-2023 03:43 PM
This was all the info that was provided to me on why a video was not approved. How about eBay tells us why. I am sure that there was a specific reason the video was flagged, and I would like to know so that I can change that and comply with the reason.
Instead I am directed to a list of reasons.
I remember this joke about someone who looked up the word "dummy" in the dictionary. The definition for "dummy" listed "idiot". He then looked up the word "idiot". The definition stated: "You again?"
This is what this feels like, and this is rather par for the course in the "tech giant" environment (see Facebook).
05-30-2023 03:53 PM
Just redo it. And submit the new one, who knows what fluke reason the likely overseas contractor or automated system decided to dislike. Chances are your new one will be just fine. I have hundreds of listings with videos and I never had a single one rejected. I would only worry about it if it became a pattern.
05-30-2023 04:03 PM
A more detailed explanation for rejection has been requested numerous times by ebay sellers. So far, I believe the response has been along the lines of "we're looking into that"
I agree with onefootflipper---if your video otherwise qualifies (not too long, correct format, no copyright violation, etc) I would resubmit it (perhaps first giving it a new file name)
05-30-2023 10:59 PM
Thanks onefootflipper. I think I figured out that my content of showing off a VCR included copyrighted material. I don't know why their system couldn't just let me know the reason the big computer took it down.
05-30-2023 11:00 PM
Thanks my-cottage ... I figured out that I was showing off the functionality of a VCR and there was a tidbit of copyrighted material in there. As I mentioned to someone else, it would be nice if the eBay computer could have mentioned that and then we would know where to go from there. I am guessing this was the reason.
05-31-2023 01:49 AM
It appears there are 7 main reasons. You should be able to narrow it down from there.
05-31-2023 07:34 AM
@discofriend wrote:Thanks my-cottage ... I figured out that I was showing off the functionality of a VCR and there was a tidbit of copyrighted material in there. As I mentioned to someone else, it would be nice if the eBay computer could have mentioned that and then we would know where to go from there. I am guessing this was the reason.
If they were really strict about that then the millions of videos in the record category of people playing the record would all be taken down. Easy fix for VCR tests though is just find some home movie tape or something else incredibly obscure (training video, graduation, etc) that won't trip any automated content filters.
06-01-2023 06:44 AM
I am surprised to hear you can post videos of records (LPs) playing and the copyrighted music. You sure about this? I wanted to do this to show the condition of vinyl records.
04-14-2024 07:20 PM
I spent 30mn with a eBay rep on the chat, asking him to give me a good reason as of why my video was not approved. I was showing an item in working condition. No copyrighted material shown, and followed all their guidelines about video quality and duration.
The rep was able to see the video uploaded on his end, confirmed it had nothing wrong on it, but still wasn't able to give me a reason as of why it was not approved, and just suggested to edit it again and re-upload.
But it got flagged again. So, I got frustrated, and linked that video from my YouTube channel, through the listing description itself, and then of course that worked just fine.
04-21-2024 07:24 PM
Ebay do deletes almost any video I post that has audio or sound in the video. I think they must have bots deleting the videos. Thinking the the videos violate copyrights. Once it was just background noise from a TV. Once I figured out how to remove the sound the video stayed up. But in this case I'm trying to sell a set of speakers and I want people to hear the speakers play in the video. The audio used for this particular listing was a clip from an audio book. An eBay remove the video. I have also used sound test from YouTube audio
04-21-2024 07:39 PM
It has become common practice for online marketplaces to not provide detailed information on how sellers have violated policy as a means of making it more difficult to circumvent policy. Amazon has been a pioneer in this area and Ebay is catching up.
As IP lawyers continue to get richer, you can expect more similar unexplained actions.