11-11-2020 05:03 PM
I bought a new RTX 3080 card. The seller had 15+ and they were selling quick so I bought one. The next day after I paid I see this "Unavailable (Removed Item)". I can only see the original post name and picture when I'm on the order summary.
It also says it still hasn't shipped. Should I assume its a scam? I've just never seen it say that. The seller also has no reviews 😕.
11-11-2020 05:13 PM
If not received, eBay will allow you to open a item not received request the day after the last eBay estimated date for delivery of your purchase.
11-12-2020 02:56 AM
First red flag was 0 feedback seller selling pricey item. Scammers will open an account, sell 5 of these, then close account or just walk away. They don't care if the account goes bad, they already have another one open and repeating the process.
Who knows if seller or eBay shut the listing down.
Contact seller to inquire about it, if they ghost you, you have your answer.
Open an INR after estimated delivery date, but unfortunately, fat chance eBay will be able to do anything.
You have a better chance opening a case with PayPal or doing a chargeback on credit card if it was used for purchase.
11-12-2020 04:42 AM
"I bought a new RTX 3080 card. The seller had 15+ and they were selling quick so I bought one".
Of course the cards were selling quickly. They were selling for about half price. If you had taken the few seconds to check the seller's feedback wold you have still bought from them, or wasn't the low price a red flag on its own?
"The next day after I paid I see this "Unavailable (Removed Item)... It also says it still hasn't shipped. Should I assume its a scam?"
Yes it was a scam, that is why the listing was removed by ebay. I'm surprised the seller is not unregistered as well.
"I can only see the original post name and picture when I'm on the order summary".
Do Not take @Anonymous , advice to file a dispute through PayPal first. The item number is available in your PayPal transaction details. With that you can file an Item Not Received (INR) dispute through the ebay Resolution Center the day after the last estimated delivery date, once you do the seller will have 3 days to respond to the dispute, when they do not, ask ebay to step in and they will issue a refund. Since there is probably no Contact Seller button on the listing, skip that step when you file the INR, that's only a suggestion anyway.
@Anonymousalso wrote, "Scammers will open an account, sell 5 of these, then close account or just walk away".
Sellers cannot remove items from an order list, they also cannot just close their accounts only ebay can do that.
You can find good deals on ebay, but when you see a too good to be true price on something, chances are very high that it is. These days checking each seller's feedback profile before buying is very important. Always do it. Thake the time to read the terms of ebay's money back guarantee (MBG) as well, so you will know what to do when you have a problem.
11-12-2020 11:00 AM
@conmc0703-mevmekgg wrote:The next day after I paid I see this "Unavailable (Removed Item)".
It also says it still hasn't shipped.
It is unsettling to see the same wrong advice over and over. In truth @conmc0703-mevmekgg, you can begin the process to get your money back the minute after your item or your seller is removed.
Look for your item on this page, click More actions > I didn't get it, and start a refund request. If you still don't have a refund after 3 business days, click Ask eBay to step in ... to force your refund.
You don't want eBay to have to pay for your refund themselves because you delayed too long to file and the scammer got away with many of the buyers' payments -- that's why the scam is profitable, or the scammers wouldn't do it.
11-12-2020 11:06 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.
It is always better to avoid giving your money to a scammer in the first place, rather than have to go to great lengths to get it back.
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 Resolution Center, you can start a similar process through your PayPal account (if you used PayPal) or your credit card account. 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 at a time or your claim may be dismissed. Generally you are better off trying to go through eBay first, then PayPal, then your payment source, assuming each previous stage is not successful.
If the seller actually ships something (but not your item) and can provide a tracking number that shows delivery, you should file a Significantly Not As Described claim with eBay (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.
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.
11-13-2020 10:12 AM - edited 11-13-2020 10:13 AM
In typical eBay fashion that card is still showing up in the #1 spot on Best Match for RTX 380 Graphics Cards.
When clicked on it shows that good old "We looked Everywhere" image.
Why doesn't eBay just delete that listing. It also shows 79 Watchers.