on 27-07-2015 09:21 AM
If I come across these people as I believe I have recently, How can I best prove it and then stick it to them.
Strange that in all the years I've been bidding it was'nt until I started buying photographic gear that I think I have seen it.
on 01-08-2015 06:11 PM
Springy, if someone else won the auction they cannot retract their bid after the auction ends. If they do not pay the seller can offer a 2nd chance, but you are not obliged to accept it.
You do not automatically become the winner when a winner does not pay.
02-08-2015 06:58 AM - edited 02-08-2015 07:00 AM
The person who had bid and bid against me then retracted did so over 24 hours after their last bid, but before the end of the auction, which is how I came to find myself a winner.
I was really annoyed because when I checked out what comes up with retracting a bid, it had a drop down menu of reasons eg wrong amount entered', and said that after retracting an incorrect bid, a buyer then had to enter the correct amount.
Well, that other bidder's reason was listed as 'wrong amount entered', yet they had not amended their bid. They didn't want to, I suppose, because they had only outbid me by about a dollar so whatever they entered would still have been leading. So it wasn't they had bid an incorrect amount, it was just they expected me to outbid again & I hadn't.
What annoyed me was I felt I had been suckered & that all their other bids were probably bogus too.
It's hard to explain, because I know people will say oh well, you did bid that amount, but it leaves a bad taste in your mouth when it happens and I have to admit I was shocked as I had checked that auction for 2 days after I was outbid, simply to see how it was going, and it stayed the same, & then I didn't go back on ebay for several days, came back and was shocked to find I had an item listed as won/unpaid for.
I notice that nowadays ebay put a message up after bidding that 'you may still be the winner' etc but I don't think they did back in those days.
In my opinion, that is one policy they should change. If a leading bid is retracted more than 30 minutes after having been made, and no higher bids are placed, then I think the second placed bidder should not be obliged to go ahead, it should become a second chance offer.
The way it is at present is a person could bid and be outbid on day one & they are expected to keep an eye on that auction for up to another 9 or 10 days, in case that leading bidder withdraws eg 13 hours before end of auction.
It's unreasonable & I just don't think most buyers work that way.
Ebay should follow their own policies anyway and not allow retractions for incorrect amount entered unless the person then immediately places a bid with correct amount.
on 02-08-2015 12:18 PM
Some people will bid a high amount to see what the current high bidders maximun bid is. Nothing to do with the seller or shilling, just someone who wants to know how much your high bid is. The entered wrong amount option is not enforced in any way. I think you can report buyers that do that often, but whether eBay does anything about it is anyone's guess.