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Steve, excellent post.
I, as well anyone, understand your frustration. The majority of so-called autograph collectors are impulse buyers. They have zero knowledge of autographs. Most of them still believe that if an autograph is listed on Ebay, then it must be authentic. We all know that is the furthest from the truth.
The slimy autograph sellers of forgeries on Ebay know exactly the mentality of Ebay autograph buyers and they take advantage of that situation.
Ebay seller "Sports2Collect (Lebron James forgeries)" is a prime example of a autograph seller knowing the mentality of Ebay Wannabe Autograph Collectors.
The worst part, is they want to believe it is real SO BAD that they discredit our advice/knowledge/facts.
I have had probably 50 people say to me: "I trust a FORENSICS EXAMINER'S opinion more than some troll"
It's all about "COAs" and "Paper proof". I had some friends over last week and the first thing they said was "So you have paperwork on all of this right?". I then go on to explain how I don't need paperwork on Mantles/Mattinglys/Riveras/etc because I study them and KNOW it's real. And how I'm apart of an autograph website that fights forgeries and help each other out with purchases. And of course they didn't really buy it...
It's pretty ridiculous at this point. The "proof photos"/bogus COAs have taken over the hobby. If it doesn't come with a COA, people are turned off, they assume it's fake. (When in reality, it's the fakes that come with a "COA" usually!)
Just a bunch of naive morons who think they got a LeBron signed jersey for $89.99
I'm sure that the people that you're helping really appreciate it. There's just so much of it going on that it's hard to make a substantial dent in the overall problem. If you keep contacting buyers, I imagine that you'll eventually be kicked off of eBay. Until eBay does something about it, I just don't see how it's going to lessen to any great degree.
The problem is eBay doesn't care what you sell, as long as they get their fees. It is a seller's world, the seller has their listing/pictures/description/"COA"/"guarantee" and ultimately it comes down to the buyer.
Barry, I can relate to your story. When I first (a decade ago) started exposing forgeries I tried as hard as I could (in a diplomatic manner) to explain to buyers of forgeries when their items were forgeries. They would always get defensive.
Then they watch Drew Max on Pawn Stars and are convinced that Pawn Stars/History Channel hired a FDS that knows what he is doing. Of course, we know differently and it's difficult to convince buyers of forgeries (especially garbage certed by Drew Max) that they own a forgery.
I could easily write a book on this subject.
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