Mega TD collection on Ebay
- Ravnnet
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- https://mapa.targeo.pl/kuchnie-na-wymiar-warszawa-ladna-41-97-500-radomsko~20490206/meble-wyposazenie-domu-sklep/adres
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Yeah, that works out at roughly $ 30 per CD - and not many of them are particularly mega rareRavnnet wrote:Saw this on Ebay: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 1120270330
A lot of money.....
I'm watching it to see what happens...............nothing is my guessSchulze wrote:That's a crazy way to sell CD's. He'd surely be better to take the time and just list them individually and let people choose the ones they're interested in.
A lot TD fans will have some/a lot of these, others will not be able to make such a significant investment, and for someone just discovering TD, nearly £2500 is a huge investment on a group they're just discovering.
I'd be surprised if he gets a buyer, though it'll be interesting to see if he does....
While I cannot speak to eBay and their refund policies, having never needed to avail myself of them, I can say that PayPal most emphatically DOES NOT abide by their policies! In fact, they wished me to break the law in clear violation of them when I was sold a Chinese counterfeit Beatles Box! I provided photographic proof and an appraisal of the fraudulent item, as well as documenting the email harassment from the buyer when I brought the matter to his attention. According to PayPal policy, the item in dispute, if proven counterfeit, was to be turned over to the authorities for destruction instead of returned to the seller, and a full refund was to be given.redziller wrote:Deffo - especially now that ebay bought paypal they take the buyers' side in nearly all disputes from my experience
Well that sucks - typically high-handed tho' they think they're the Star Chamber of transactionsgoozer wrote:While I cannot speak to eBay and their refund policies, having never needed to avail myself of them, I can say that PayPal most emphatically DOES NOT abide by their policies! In fact, they wished me to break the law in clear violation of them when I was sold a Chinese counterfeit Beatles Box! I provided photographic proof and an appraisal of the fraudulent item, as well as documenting the email harassment from the buyer when I brought the matter to his attention. According to PayPal policy, the item in dispute, if proven counterfeit, was to be turned over to the authorities for destruction instead of returned to the seller, and a full refund was to be given.redziller wrote:Deffo - especially now that ebay bought paypal they take the buyers' side in nearly all disputes from my experience
However, there is also a clause that says their decision in mediation is final. So, in spite of the conclusive proof of fraud, I am the proud owner of a counterfeit Beatles Box. The FBI Anti-Piracy website never followed up on my claim, and my credit card company sided with PayPal, since I didn't commit mail-fraud by shipping the counterfiet goods back to the seller.
Caveat emptor indeed.
Not entirely sure I follow that, sorrygoozer wrote:redziller wrote:
While I cannot speak to eBay and their refund policies, having never needed to avail myself of them, I can say that PayPal most emphatically DOES NOT abide by their policies! In fact, they wished me to break the law in clear violation of them when I was sold a Chinese counterfeit Beatles Box! I provided photographic proof and an appraisal of the fraudulent item, as well as documenting the email harassment from the buyer when I brought the matter to his attention. According to PayPal policy, the item in dispute, if proven counterfeit, was to be turned over to the authorities for destruction instead of returned to the seller, and a full refund was to be given.
However, there is also a clause that says their decision in mediation is final. So, in spite of the conclusive proof of fraud, I am the proud owner of a counterfeit Beatles Box. The FBI Anti-Piracy website never followed up on my claim, and my credit card company sided with PayPal, since I didn't commit mail-fraud by shipping the counterfiet goods back to the seller.
Caveat emptor indeed.
As mentioned above, PayPal's policy regarding counterfeit items is they are not to be returned to the seller. The FBI Anti-Piracy reporting site also makes the same request. If you wonder why that is, I can point out two obvious reasons: 1) What would prevent the seller from resealing the item and defrauding someone else; and 2) What would prevent the seller from claiming that I kept the real item and am now attempting to defraud them on a refund claim?moonloop wrote:goozer wrote:Not entirely sure I follow that, sorryredziller wrote:
While I cannot speak to eBay and their refund policies, having never needed to avail myself of them, I can say that PayPal most emphatically DOES NOT abide by their policies! In fact, they wished me to break the law in clear violation of them when I was sold a Chinese counterfeit Beatles Box! I provided photographic proof and an appraisal of the fraudulent item, as well as documenting the email harassment from the buyer when I brought the matter to his attention. According to PayPal policy, the item in dispute, if proven counterfeit, was to be turned over to the authorities for destruction instead of returned to the seller, and a full refund was to be given.
However, there is also a clause that says their decision in mediation is final. So, in spite of the conclusive proof of fraud, I am the proud owner of a counterfeit Beatles Box. The FBI Anti-Piracy website never followed up on my claim, and my credit card company sided with PayPal, since I didn't commit mail-fraud by shipping the counterfiet goods back to the seller.
Caveat emptor indeed.
Why didn't you just return the item (tracked) to the seller and get a refund less the return shipping costs..?? As a buyer, you have the right to not accept an item, which you clearly didn't, so ownership then reverts back to the seller, there's no fraud involved other than by the seller. Apologies if I've missunderstood.
Ah...now I get you. That's toughgoozer wrote:
As mentioned above, PayPal's policy regarding counterfeit items is they are not to be returned to the seller. The FBI Anti-Piracy reporting site also makes the same request. If you wonder why that is, I can point out two obvious reasons: 1) What would prevent the seller from resealing the item and defrauding someone else; and 2) What would prevent the seller from claiming that I kept the real item and am now attempting to defraud them on a refund claim?
They chose to ignore not only their policy, but also the law. But then, so did the authorities. [/i]