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I have purchased a Star Wars The Force Awakens poster with most major signatures Harrison Ford, Mark Hamill, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, Lupita Nyongo, Gwendoline Christie and JJ Abrams from someone who was at the European premier on 16th December. They are sending photos as well with the poster. I will need to get the signatures authenticated. Fortunately if they were found to be forged I will be able to get my money back as Ebay and paypal do not tolerate this. I paid £175. There is a photo with Harrison Ford the person took at the premier as well on the ebay page.
Please see the link below
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/181975016329?_trksid=p2057872.m2749.l2649...
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It's not illegal. It's not breaking ebays terms. The seller has acted in good faith by refunding the buyer completely- the buyer is whole again. This is a different scenario than someone who takes the money and runs. The seller completed his obligation under eBays rules- the buyer was not satisfied, so the refund was given. The deal was on the UK version of eBay so no U.S. laws could be broken.
You seem to think the seller should be crucified for selling this item. I think that until we know the entire set of circumstances, judgement is premature- or as it says in U.S. law "innocent until proven guilty", lol.
What is your definition of reliable? A seller who sells a pretty expensive item, then is told by the buyer it is not as described, and acts by refunding the buyer in full seems to be operating fairly honestly, IMO. You guys are just so used to attacking eBay sellers, you are numb to the possibility that a mistake was made. The buyer has been made whole- so no "crime" exists. If he lists it again on eBay, with knowledge that it is a fake, then I think you can make the case that he was intending to defraud. I don't know where he got the poster- did he "personally obtain it" as in the item description, or did he buy it from a guy who told him HE got it signed, and for lack of a better descriptive dropdown, chose the one he did. I don't know, neither do you.
How do you use feedback, Steve? Do you look at it to determine reliability? What is the endpoint where you determine reliability is bad for any given seller? 1 negative? 2? 8? A dozen? I've sold on ebay for a very long time, and I have received negative feedbacks and I've never acted in bad faith in any of my transactions- the buyers were simply quick to the trigger to slam me before I had a chance in some cases to make the situation right. For example, I mailed out the wrong CD to a buyer- an original CD instead of the remaster (I had both for sale at the same time and they ended same day). Buyer was upset, messaged me and then left negative feedback calling me a scam artist. I refunded all her money including shipping, told her to keep CD and she refused to alter the feedback. Was it warranted? IMO, no, she acted hastily. Did that negative feedback now mean I am not a reliable seller? Do you think the thousands of positive feedbacks mean anything? Not really- people tend to look at the bad before the good, and it might have cost me some sales, I'll never know.
In this case, the seller did the right thing- most crooks with intent to defraud would never refund in full. That tells me something about the seller. All I'm trying to say is that you are too quick to judge because of your almost nonstop war with forgeries on eBay and the sellers of those items. The constant exposure to all these fakes has tainted common sense around here. People makes mistakes, and this seller clearly admitted it and acted responsible, as he should.
Maybe it's on a disputed process. I really haven't dealt with that except when I receive something I want to return. But, I would not slam a seller if they return the funds to me without a fight. I know mine is not the popular opinion but I believe the buyer has a responsibility to take proper precautions. I do believe that knowledgeable people should contact ebay with their concerns on forgeries, for the little is seems have any effect. I do not like forgers and believe they should be banned and charged with a crime, but that doesn't appear to be a top priority for law enforcement. How long does it take for potential buyers to do a google search, find this site, and ask for some opinions? 5 minutes? 10 minutes?
There is no fraud once the buyer has been reimbursed. You have no way of knowing what the seller will do in the future and stating that you do is just hyperbole.
Sorry, but it's 2016- any buyer of anything has to be responsible enough to investigate their purchases beforehand. Anyone who buys a high-end or expensive item without researching it first is either lazy or stupid- it is incredibly easy to find information on practically anything these days. Nobody gets a pass on being responsible for their own purchases, IMO. Using your logic, I should go buy a used car and take the salesman's story that it was only driven by a little old lady on Sundays to and from church as gospel. No need to carfax it, no need to have a mechanic look at it, no need to test drive it, it's fine, right? You're so tough on sellers but easy on buyers when in reality, shouldn't they be equally responsible for the transaction- the seller must sell a quality product if he advertises that, and the buyer must have an understanding of what quality is. The only way the dumb get smarter is to LEARN.
I agree. There are three parties in this situation that have erred. Ebay should, at minimum, try to weed out sellers that consistently sell forgeries. They have some accountability to protect the buyer. The seller has a responsibility to, at minimum, try to make sure what they offer for sale is genuine. That's good business. At least, they did refund the money. And the buyer has a responsibility to handle their money diligently. Information about fakes and forgeries have been well documented on all forms of media. All three parties are guilty...guilty...guilty. But, in this case, the buyer did request a refund and the seller honored that request. This ended better than most cases.
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