07-25-2021 09:22 AM
I purchased a scam item accidentally on ebay yesterday: https://www.ebay.com/itm/294287654483 yes I should have known too good to be true, and now doing more searching I see the images were cut and pasted from this legitimate ad: https://www.ebay.com/itm/274859666574. From what I've been told, I have no choice to wait for the item to NOT be received by the anticipated shipment date, and then I can open a ticket with ebay to resolve.
My question is, should I take any action sooner than this? I'll be more careful for future.
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07-25-2021 09:48 AM - edited 07-25-2021 09:50 AM
Yeah... a dicey proposition with a '0' feedback seller, agreed. As to the images... a stock photo is a stock photo and theirs could have come from anywhere, likely not from the second listing... but who knows?
Unfortunately, no action can be taken before the Estimated Delivery Date is passed. If you don't have it by then, open an Item Not Received claim. You'll be made whole. Good luck.
Edit: You can't 'accidently' purchase on eBay. The best you can do is stay vigilant moving forward.
07-25-2021 09:35 AM
Hello,
I have checked your inquiry carefully. It seems unusual. Don't worry. Keep touch in tracking details. If there is anything wrong with your transaction eBay will help you. eBay is a good market place for cooperate. You had better aware of contact the seller or feedback rating of the seller before transaction.
Have a nice day.
07-25-2021 09:48 AM - edited 07-25-2021 09:50 AM
Yeah... a dicey proposition with a '0' feedback seller, agreed. As to the images... a stock photo is a stock photo and theirs could have come from anywhere, likely not from the second listing... but who knows?
Unfortunately, no action can be taken before the Estimated Delivery Date is passed. If you don't have it by then, open an Item Not Received claim. You'll be made whole. Good luck.
Edit: You can't 'accidently' purchase on eBay. The best you can do is stay vigilant moving forward.
07-25-2021 09:53 AM
What action would you take? How did you pay for the purchase? Should there not be some consequences for buyers who either knowingly purchase an item that is probably stolen (Based on the price being well below market value) or who let their greed overcome their common sense. Perhaps having to wait a month to get your money will have a lasting impression on you and the 3 other knuckleheads who purchased from this obviously fraudulent listing.
07-25-2021 10:00 AM
Another Sri Lankan drop-shipping from China with an illegal paypal account gives advice?
07-25-2021 10:21 AM
If a listing is too good to be true -- such as a new item that is selling for a fraction of its retail cost -- that is certainly a warning sign. And if a relatively new seller is suddenly selling thousands of dollars worth of multiple quantity listings at fire sale prices with free shipping from overseas with extended handling times and very long shipping estimates, you should be very concerned, particularly if the items are expensive electronics, cameras, musical instruments, tools or outboard motors.
In general, you can avoid a lot of headaches by choosing to purchase only from established sellers that have recent and past positive feedback as a seller for selling items in the same category that you intend to buy. If someone is selling a dozen apple watches, but has no feedback, or only has feedback as a buyer, or only has feedback for selling dress patterns or fishing lures (actual examples I have seen), perhaps wait until they have a track record of positive feedback for selling electronics before you buy from them.
You might miss out on a good deal from a new seller once in a while, and nothing can guarantee that you won't still run into a scammer anyway, but you can avoid a lot of potential problems by choosing to do business with established sellers. Anyone can put together a listing that looks nice -- it is not hard at all to simply copy an existing listing -- but it is much harder to create a history of consistent sales and positive feedback.
If you have made a purchase from a listing that you think may be suspicious:
Typically you have to wait until the last estimated delivery date has passed to start an Item Not Received claim on eBay; if the seller is removed and eBay does not send you a message about that, and if you can no longer find the item in your Purchase History or on the Help page, you can start a similar process through your PayPal account (if you used PayPal) or through your credit card or other payment source. There are various deadlines that have to be met at each stage, and you must take care not to make more than one claim about a single transaction through eBay or PayPal or your funding source at a time or your claim may be dismissed.
If the seller actually ships something (but not your item) and can provide a tracking number that shows delivery, you must file a Significantly Not As Described claim (and typically return the item), as a valid tracking number that shows delivery would cause you to lose an Item Not Received claim. There are other scams that involve shipping an item to another location in your zip code which can complicate matters further.
If possible bookmark the seller's feedback page so that you can monitor that to see if the seller's account has been removed from eBay, just in case the item listing disappears.
07-25-2021 11:43 AM
@tdumonde2014 wrote:purchase an item that is probably stolen (Based on the price being well below market value)
There is no physical item to ship: it's just pictures and words on a web page.
Without packing or shipping anything, the seller simply uploads a tracking number
- to prove a fake delivery,
- to keep the buyer's payment.
07-25-2021 11:46 AM
This the same refrigerator you were asking about earlier, or did you purchase a second one as well?
(that first link is dead, by the way - the second one is still active, though)
07-25-2021 12:35 PM
Without packing or shipping anything, the seller simply uploads a tracking number
- to prove a fake delivery,
- to keep the buyer's payment.
That is one possible scam. In that case the buyer would lose an initial INR but may win an appeal -- or may be able to contact eBay via Facebook or Twitter with documentation that the item was not delivered to the correct address and get a refund that way.
There are other scams, though, such as triangulation scams. In that case the scammer may have an actual item drop-shipped, paid for with a stolen credit card. If the item is delivered, the provider of the product may ultimately attempt to go after the buyer for payment or return of the item. Or the scammer may have a plastic trinket delivered to the buyer, or to a nearby address, to be able to show tracking and delivery.
07-25-2021 02:14 PM
It seems odd for you to ask this again, when you have already posted and accepted an answer as the solution, on this thread:
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07-25-2021 07:07 PM
You are right. Thanks!
07-25-2021 07:09 PM
There's nothing I disagree with in your assessment. I will not do this again. Thanks.