on 07-06-2014 02:44 PM
I'm writing this as a warning for buyers. These are everywhere, the white 64gb toshiba flash drives. I just brought one and tested it, it only holds 4gb. Which is a noticable difference. I regret leaving a positive feedback for the guy as he asked for it when I asked for a refund. At that time I did not know it was a blatant counterfeit, just thought it was faulty. Since then I ran some tests. Will post test results shortly.
on 07-06-2014 04:04 PM
After testing 7gb
The media is likely to be defective.
1012.4 MByte OK (2073586 sectors)
5.8 GByte DATA LOST (12297230 sectors)
Details:7 KByte overwritten (14 sectors)
0 KByte slightly changed (< 8 bit/sector, 0 sectors)
5.8 GByte corrupted (12297216 sectors)
7 KByte aliased memory (14 sectors)
First error at offset: 0x000000003f47e400
Expected: 0x000000003f47e400
Found: 0x000000003f4fe000
H2testw version 1.3
on 09-06-2014 10:03 AM
good luck getting your money back .. ebay will allow the seller to continue until they don't pay their bill .. you will be told by ebay/paypal to return your item via expensive tracked airmail postage to the seller and politely ask for an exchange or refund at ytheir descretion .. I have been down this road too and have seenliterally thousands of ebay buyers scammed via ebay china on this particular scam .. unfortunately ebay does such a great job of protecting scammers identities that I have no idea which seller you are referring to, but at a guess your seller is located in China, the land of free international postage and no ebay fees ..
09-06-2014 10:30 AM - edited 09-06-2014 10:31 AM
All is not lost, however. If you've lodged a dispute with Paypal and it is not yet resolved (or you've yet to lodge a dispute), you need to ring them and tell them that under Australian law, it is illegal for you to send counterfeit items via Australia Post and you are therefore unable to return the fake drive to China as requested in order to receive a refund.
You may need to ask to speak with a supervisor, and they will probably require letterheaded documentary evidence from your local computer shop to prove that the drive is indeed counterfeit, but you won't be required to send the item back to China and will be asked to destroy and dispose of it, and you will still receive a full refund.
I don't know how much it cost and you may not consider it a worthwhile or economically viable exercise, but nevertheless I'd still be inclined to do it purely on principle, and to teach the seller that in Australia, at least, he will be forced to refund regardless, without getting his drive back to sell to some other poor unsuspecting buyer.
on 10-06-2014 10:43 PM
on 11-06-2014 12:17 AM
on 11-06-2014 10:28 AM
on 11-06-2014 11:33 AM
on 16-06-2014 06:08 PM
Hi , as this item is branded by a major oem with commercial interests in high value computer items , I would send both drive and data to them for appropriate action , note also the Seller details including address etc (via dispute data) and also Seller sales (to add gravity to issue from the named oem prospective), allude to not being happy and wondering whether their laptops are of the same quality
(Of course you know they did not manufacture those but is the thought conveyed to them of being type cast that should contribute to overcoming any corporate inertia)
Best if you have won a few to show is a chronic issue although being fake should be enough to galvanize the oem into action
on 20-06-2014 03:04 PM