Archive for December, 2008
How To Spot An eBay Scam Seller
by admin on Dec.10, 2008, under eBay, shopping
eBay is scammer central. There are many sellers who know the system well and can fool you into trusting them. They know all the tricks, and if you are an infrequent eBayer, it’s easy for them to get the best of you. Here are some warning signs that the eBay seller you are considering making a purchase from wants to scam you.
- The seller is relatively new, but has an apparently sophisticated system going with many auctions or sales. This could indicate the were banned, or got a large amount of negative feedback with a previous account or accounts, and are starting fresh
- They have a low number of feedback comments, but frequent sales. Again, if they are selling at a good pace for a number of weeks, it could mean they are new and getting a strong start. More likely they are an experienced seller and just started a new account because they were banned or got too much negative feedback.
- Their positive feedback is for low priced items. They do have some negative feedback, especially regarding misrepresentation or poor communication. People on eBay generally don’t give negative feedback lightly, so no matter how plausible the reply, multiple negative feedback in a short amount of time is a red flag.
- The deals look too good to be true. They usually are.
- The shipping is too high. Shipping is now posted prominently in auctions, so it’s harder to pull this now, but scam sellers will try to get away with jacking it up as much as they think they can get away with. They will often quote a premium shipping service and actually ship with a cheaper carrier, and pocket the difference.
Even after you know you’ve been scammed, and confront the scam seller, they will try to fool you into thinking you have no recourse. You do! Immediately post negative feedback and warn others. Go to the resolution center. If you paid with Paypal (which you should ALWAYS do on eBay) visit the PayPal Resolution Center to open your case. Then you can file a claim under PayPal’s Buyer Protection program.
Babel Movie Review
by admin on Dec.10, 2008, under DVD Movies
Babel, starring Brad Pitt and Kate Blanchett is the third movie in a trilogy co-written and directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu. It won the “Best Picture” Golden Globe. That shows how pretensious and shallow Hollywood establishment journalists are. Also won Oscar nominations, which is not surprising.
I checked Babel out at the library so I didn’t waste my money. Just my time. The value I got out of it was the “slice of life” from different cultures in Japan, Mexico and Morroco.
The movie itself was exploitation draped in a thin pretense. Sure they spoke different languages. Sure they were connected, but in a very contrived way. That doesn’t justify depicting a child pleasuring himself after seeing his sister naked, or a deaf Japanese school girl flashing in public, or a dying woman making out with her husband while using a bedpan. To pretend that these scenes were anything other than exploitation is hypocrisy.
Another thing I gained from seeing this movie, is confirmation that if you want to make a film that wins awards, just make the film revolve around a safe, non-controversial ”issue.” Then pour in the action, perversion and porn to sell, sell, sell!!!
eBay Scam Seller
by admin on Dec.08, 2008, under eBay, shopping
I purchased an old Macintosh SE on eBay last week for $10 plus $40 shipping. For $50 I would have a piece of computing nostalgia - an anachronistic curiosity that I could mess around with for the remainder of it’s life, and then properly discard as eWaste, when that life came to a natural end. I have old SE peripherals, software and music files I used to create MIDI music back in the day, and this machine would allow me to take a stroll down memory lane. But it was not to be. When I received the old Mac, it had already met it’s demise:
The Sad Mac icon, indicating a dead hard-drive. The icon is barely discernable because the CRT (cathode ray tube) is so messed up. I looked at the box and could find no damage. I did notice that it was shipped DHL, not UPS as the auction specified. I went back to eBay and confirmed that it was supposed to be shipped UPS with $100 of insurance, but I noticed something else. My sad Mac was not the same model as the one in the auction picture, which was there to demonstrate that the unit being sold still worked.
I contacted the seller to inform him of the problem, but didn’t mention the picture issue to see what he would say. He didn’t respond within 2 days, so I sent another message, this time mentioning that the picture he sent of the working Mac SE was a different model than the broken unit I received. This time he responded within about 15 minutes, saying he was sorry the unit didn’t work, but that the picture WAS of the unit I received. That was it. Either he accidentally sent the wrong Macintosh SE from his extensive inventory (sarcassm) or he was trying to scam me. Selling a broken computer as working, and pretending it was damaged in shipment. I replied with the specifics of how I or anyone could tell that the computer in the auction picture was different from the Mac I got.
His reply completely ignored the picture issue and instead offered to refund the $10 I paid for the computer. Not the $40 shipping. A little back and forth later the best deal I could get from him was a full refund by shipping the computer back to him at my cost. So any way you sliced it, I was going to pay for shipping a dead stick across the country. I chose to leave negative feedback and try to get eBay to resolve the issue through the resolution center.







