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Trying not to get scammed

I'm a first time seller selling an expensive item. I'm trying to devise a bulletproof way to not get scammed, even if it costs quite a bit extra. My current plan is to ship the item through the USPS with Insured Restricted Delivery (+ signature confirmation?, not sure if restricted delivery includes signature confirmation) and thoroughly document the packaging process, mainly by recording the entire thing. Even if that isn't enough to win under ebay's dispute policy, I do think it's enough to win either an arbitration or a mail fraud case.  I want to make sure I'm understanding everything correctly; would this provide me with complete protection? 

Message 1 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed

The thing sold yesterday, May 5, for $1,460 + shipping.  OPs post was after the fact.

 

I saw that, too.  Hope it is not headed to "Deleware" . 

 

Message 31 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed

@maxine*j 

I see that maxine, oh well OP will be back on the forum wanting to know where his money is or that buyer pulls INR. That whole thread was weird, wonder if it was too "Hot" to handle?

Message 32 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed

Don't sell expensive items if you're new or can't afford to lose them.

Message 33 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed

Buyer can receive item and then claim "not as described" and return a "box of rocks".   EBAY will side with buyer (doesn't matter how much proof you have). 

 

Buyer can also reverse charges with credit card company after receipt of item.   Stating item was "defective or unauthorized purchase". 

Message 34 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed


@silverstatetreasureboxes wrote:

@maxine*j 

I see that maxine, oh well OP will be back on the forum wanting to know where his money is or that buyer pulls INR. That whole thread was weird, wonder if it was too "Hot" to handle?


Frankly, I wondered the same thing, and wondered who might be the one wearing the black hat.

 

=

Message 35 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed

Honestly, I suggest you get a paycheck job. You'll just get in trouble and be disappointed selling on-line.

Message 36 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed

Or a buyer asking why they were shipped a rock and not a motherboard.

 

Weird dude.  Weird post.

Message 37 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed

Still waiting for the explanation of how you could sell it right now elsewhere for more money and with more protection, but eBay is your venue of choice.  Because . . .?

Message 38 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed

DE948077-873D-40DF-B20E-35B1C2CB086E.jpeg

 On the screenshot i took of the transaction date in the app, the sale is showing sold 5-6-21. So he posted here before the sale took place, i believe. But the thing sold almost immediately.

Message 39 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed


@ovlm4341 wrote:

While videos can be faked surely having a video is better than not having one, right? Another thought I had would be to subpoena the post office security camera footage (should this escalate to a court case)


None of that would do any good.

There's no way you can prove what was in the package when you dropped it off an USPS.

Have a great day.
Message 40 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed


@ovlm4341 wrote:

  I want to make sure I'm understanding everything correctly; would this provide me with complete protection? 


 

No.

When you sell on the Internet, there is no complete protection.

Have a great day.
Message 41 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed


@ovlm4341 wrote:

Oh I could sell it today and get more than I would make on eBay, but yes I'm certain it's not an option. 


Then why take a chance?

You could sell it on Ebay and loose the item and any payment.

Have a great day.
Message 42 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed

Well, if both the buyer and seller are honest individuals, this transaction will go off just fine.

 

But...

a zero feedback seller with a high dollar, highly scammed item is a recipe for disaster no matter what cookbook you are using.

 

Call me cynical, but I predict a 99% chance of one of the two parties involved in the transaction being scammed.

The easier you are to offend the easier you are to control.


We seem to be getting closer and closer to a situation where nobody is responsible for what they did but we are all responsible for what somebody else did. - Thomas Sowell
Message 43 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed


@fashunu4eeuh wrote:

 

 On the screenshot i took of the transaction date in the app, the sale is showing sold 5-6-21. So he posted here before the sale took place, i believe. But the thing sold almost immediately.


Okay.  Thanks for the correction.  But posting after the fact of listing, instead of before, is just about as bad.

 

=

Message 44 of 51
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Re: Trying not to get scammed

Color me crazy, but this whole thread sounds like one scammer trying not to get scammed by another scammer.  


She who dies with the most toys still dies; when's the estate sale?
Message 45 of 51
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