on โ21-01-2015 10:47 AM
on โ21-01-2015 02:05 PM
eBay owns Paypal and promote their buyer/seller schemes. It is about time that the two combined to ensure, cross border transactions, are forced to use, propriortery delivery services. That is, be forced to use eBay controlled or fail proof organisations.
This should apply to all transactions, above a certain USD value, maybe they can do it by upping the ante, so that goods worth - say USD1000+ will incur an additional levy, from both eBay and Paypal. They could then collude to use this extra income, to guarantee safe delivery. In the long run they would get to decrease their corporate insurance costs and hopefully employ more people, worldwide. Hope this makes sense.
On your case Michael, for that amount I would not have paid immediately. I would have bid, then if I had won the auction, awaited an official invioce from the seller, which would have been very specific, as to the address, for delivery. From your history, you seem to be new to eBay.
All the same, the very best for a good resolution.
on โ21-01-2015 02:13 PM
whilst it is very sad that this has happened to you there are a few things to mention
1. YOU, the buyer fill in your name and full address when making the paypal payment before it is forwarded to the seller.
did you check your name and address were correct when you went thru paypal checkout?
2. that was a lot of money to spend with a seller with little or no Sales Record. that guy has previously only sold a dozen or so $2 items
and then all of a sudded a $6,000 item? always a bit suss.
good luck with persuing paypal thru the NZ Banking authorities.
on โ21-01-2015 02:22 PM
Why would the seller ask for your name and address.....those details are automatically given to the seller by ebay when you win the item and by paypal when you pay and confirm the address to which the item is to be sent.
on โ21-01-2015 02:49 PM
It would've been a hijacked account and the scammer might have sent a Paypal payment request through a
phishing Email,(hence why they didn't worry about an address).
This sounds like that Chinese scammer that was doing this with high end TV's last year.
The real item wouldn't be in the package,(which could contain anything).
on โ22-01-2015 08:20 AM
Nice answer thank you.
Yes the delivery to a busy address is the only way this scam could work & it is obvious that's why they do it this way.
Do you mean the financial ombudsman?
I thoroughly discussed it with paypal on the phone many times & checked paypals policies on returns & non receipt & they led me to believe it was a safe transaction & they would hold my money until it was received & verified authentic. They completely scammed me also.
on โ22-01-2015 08:27 AM
Yes great idea for afe shipping & something ebay & paypal would have thought about, so very intriguing as to why they haven't implemented it ????
The official receipt from paypal was signature courier & insurance which was ignored.
Yes new to Ebay which i why this little loophole should be tied up, it probably targets the new users.
on โ22-01-2015 08:37 AM
Hi. I don't actually recall filling in the name & address when making payment but the delivery name & address were correct on my paypal account, The tranaction was cancelled by the seller as soon as I made payment so I was expecting a refund & didn't even get a chance to email him the address details & paypal respond that they don't give the details, so I don't think the seller had them.
NZPOST physically saw the package & it didn't even resemble my details , being addresed to skycity POBox.
on โ22-01-2015 08:38 AM
He didn't ask for them & I didn't give them. Paypal told me they don't give thoe details?
on โ22-01-2015 08:40 AM
Yes it was a legitimate Paypal request & payment.
on โ22-01-2015 08:46 AM
As soon as you buy something, the seller gets an email saying their item has sold and in that email is your postage details. When you pay via PayPal, that also contains your details. Providing you had given your correct address in both eBay and PayPal (which I'm sure you did), then the seller would have had your correct address.
I would be contacting the Financial Ombudsman and seeing what they have to say. There are a number of Chinese scammers at any given time advertising cheap items, which suck newer buyers in. For example, an 18V Makita cordless drill with all sorts of accessories for $19.99. These scammers list them in categories with no buyer protection (in categories in the cars section). Most buyers try to make a claim through PayPal when they discover they have been scammed and are promptly told there is no buyer protection and they can't have a refund.
Some buyers are smart enough to push the issue and end up getting a refund, but most just write it off to bad luck and the scammers run off with their money. This is why you need to keep pushing the issue. Don't just say "oh well, I've lost my money", hound the daylights out of them. Submit a report with the Ombudsman. Do whatever it takes.
In future, ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS check a sellers feedback, especially if they are low feedback sellers. Yes, we all had to start from 0, but always be suspicious of someone who has low feedback and selling a high ticket item.
Good luck and please keep us posted.