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How are con artists
stealing money from eBay buyers? Case I |
by:
Nikolai
Nikonov |
Someone is using
another person as a middleman.
You find a laptop there and you like a price, you think: "Okay. It's very
good deal! I will win this auction!" And you win.
You write to a seller and ask him how to pay. The seller is reply that you
should send a money order to him/her. Then you send the money
order and... nothing. You try to contact with the seller, but
nobody replies on your messages.
You use eBay to get seller's information. What a hell!? I sent the money to
another person!!! You call to the seller and find that he
doesn't know what eBay is. Someone used his credit card to
signup.
You find a phone number of a person who had received your money order. You
call to her and learn that she is just receiving money orders on
behalf of an overseas company.
She doesn't know what eBay is also. Heck! You want your money back! But it's
very problematic…
As I know it's impossible!
What do you learn from it?
Before bidding on an auction:
- Look at the payments part of a page. If a seller accepts money orders and
cashiers' checks only when it's a 95% scam. Feedback means
almost nothing. I will explain it later.
- Ask a seller for his/her phone number and make a call to be sure that the
seller is real person who is selling an item.
- If a seller is refused or avoiding to contact you via the phone ask for
the eBay escrow service. Use eBay escrow only! Do not trust
other companies.
- If you reached a seller by a phone and negotiated with him about a payment
method you can bid on the auction safely.
Some advanced knowledge:
I said early that feedback means nothing. Why?
Because some scam artists are buying eBay accounts with a high feedback
rating.
And why you should trust eBay escrow services only? Because rippers are
running bogus escrow sites and try to rip you off.
Theirs site looks very fine. You will see a professional design and great
domain name. But... it’s only fake, intended to take your money
and run.
Very often such services tell you to transfer money to an overseas bank
account or e-gold account.
REMEMBER THAT A BIG PART OF SCAM ARTISTS SIMPLY DON'T DO THE NEXT STEP IF
YOU WILL ASK FOR THE EBAY ESCROW OR PHONE CALL. I KNOW IT,
BECAUSE I'M THE RETIRED RIPPER.
About the author:
Article by Nikolai Nikonov - the publisher of eBay and internet
fraud blog
http://ebay-fraud.blogspot.comm
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