02-26-2022 12:56 PM
Hi
I would be careful about posting someone's Ebay ID somewhere and saying what they did (Or did not do and lie to damage them). Don't you open yourself for a potential lawsuit? What about if someone posts their hated EX ID to have them blocked by many people or damage their business?
Weatherloach
02-26-2022 01:04 PM
I have plenty to BBL without ever having to look at those sites.
While I know they exist, I'm not actively looking for people to block, kwim? So, I block if I or someone on a board I'm on have had a bad experience or if I read about them on here AND they buy the types of items I sell. I don't see the point in wasting a precious spot for someone who buys auto parts or sports memorabilia if that's not what I sell. That's just my 2 cents.
02-26-2022 01:10 PM
Naming and shaming on these boards violates the forum policy. Those type of comments are usually removed. It's the same if a seller posts a negative positive review.
02-26-2022 01:42 PM
I think it is worthless, that being said I would not be afraid to publicly post a truthful account of a bad buying experience be it a large company or a individual
02-26-2022 02:20 PM
I think it's an inevitable consequence of eBay's refusal to allow sellers to leave feedback for buyers. Sellers are going to fight back against eBay's skewed buyer-can-do-no-wrong policies any way they can.
02-27-2022 04:59 AM
Not on Ebay, outside Ebay. Check popular social sites and look.
Cute dog!
02-27-2022 05:56 AM
Frankly I am surprised some creative entrepreneur has not setup a site where for a nominal fee you could provide account ID's, both buyer and seller, and search for potential ecommerce scammers similar to the way there are several sites where you can report and block phone numbers.
The ecommerce environment is so heavily tilted towards the buyer across almost all sites that the sellers have limited capability to protect themselves.