01-28-2025 08:51 AM
Coins listed under numbers 404476794193 and 176798109984 are identical. Blow up the picture and look at the flaw in the top left corner in the N in Unum and the dimple in the lower right of the M in Unum. See the dig/scratch on the neck just below the hairline that crosses the jawline. Look at the scratch along the cheekbone line on both coins. They are the same coin. But you allowed the sale of the first one in 2023, and rejected the sale of the second one in 2025 claiming it is a replica coin - but your AI says the original listing was not a replica. The human eye can pick it up, but AI cannot - your AI must not be functioning properly.
01-28-2025 08:58 AM
Even the AI that governs the 'Report an Item' is not functioning against counterfeits. In the "Vintage Axe" sales section, dozens of replica antique axes are being sold by the same seller (who manufactures them) and reports consistently get kicked back by the AI as no violations found.
01-28-2025 09:18 AM
eBay is not here; this is a user forum.
Typically eBay cannot conclude that a listing is fraudulent based solely on an examination of an image in the listing, if for no other reason than scammers can copy an image from an otherwise legitimate listing, and then actually deliver something else (or nothing).
It is possible to compare two images and determine if they are the same image, but that does not prove that one or the other listing is actually "illegitimate".