wulf3n said:
I actually think his action was a calculated decision when considering paypals and/or ebays policies regarding poor/misleading item descriptions.
The whole article reads that way, in all honesty. He admitted the description said that it was a photo, he admitted that the seller had NO negative comments and had been around for awhile, and he admitted that even though he realized that the auction was in the wrong place he placed his bid anyway. Sounds like I wasn't the only one who read the Violin article two years ago. Confused? Go here. [http://www.cbsnews.com/news/paypal-makes-ebay-customer-destroy-2500-violin-seller-left-empty-handed/]
What is even MORE concerning is the fact that the auction no longer exists on eBay. At all. I mean, normally after something sells, the auction page remains accessible on the site labeled as "sold", but this auction has been completely erased! I searched for almost an hour (because working computer retail on a day when half the city is snowed in means I have a lot of free time on my hands) and found nothing.
The reason I searched was because I wanted to see this auction page for myself. I search eBay for memorabilia for my favorite movies and if any field gets mislabeled it is THAT one! Sellers will post in the title of their auction one thing but in the description something else. Books or music albums that share only the TITLE of the movie are also commonly "miss files". It is something the sellers due to get more hits and raise the odds of their product selling. Sort of like the poster of a Youtube video of someone doing something gross adds "cute kittens" or "Justin Bieber" to their Search Tags; to points more people towards the video and raises the hits.
But most people who post will make it VERY clear when something being auctioned is not EXACTLY what is described in the title. I am currently searching for props used on the set of my favorite movie and I found an auction labeled "Real Movie Prop". After clicking on the auction link to get more details, the description said "Real Movie Prop REPLICA" and descriptive how the seller did research on the film (which included visiting the company that made the props for the film, so 'go, dude') and made the replica based on that. Only if I hadn't been paying attention would I have missed the giant all-caps REPLICA label. I would like to think that is what happened here, but the article doesn't make it sound that way.
I feel sorriest for the gaming store that got roped into this. Dude, sell it to him at a discount. It's not like he didn't get his money back, Paypal bends over backwards to get people their money back if they aren't satisfied. That's one of the reason I will NEVER use Paypal!