10 Ways to Avoid Being Ripped Off on eBay
It is important to remember that eBay is a lot
like a marketplace. There will always be a dodgy guy in the corner,
selling things that most people wouldn’t touch. The trouble is that,
on the Internet, these people can be a little harder to spot. Here
are ten tips to help you keep an eye out for the rip-off merchants.
1. If it seems too good to be true, it probably is: This holds for
everything in life, but especially for eBay. Things that seem too
cheap are usually too cheap for a reason – it might be a complete
scam, or the items might just be of extremely poor quality.
Investigate before you go further.
2. Know the value of what you want to buy: There are people on eBay
who regularly bid such high prices for used cameras that they might
as well have gone out and bought them brand new. Check around for
prices first.
3. Only bid on real things: eBay has plenty of people who are trying
to sell all sorts of schemes and scams. It is never worth bidding
for these, no matter how cheap they might be.
4. Don’t do anything outside eBay: Occasionally people will ask you
to send them money outside eBay, to avoid the fees eBay charges
sellers. Any money you send this way is entirely insecure – don’t do
it.
5. Be careful where you send payment: People may hack into others’
accounts, and ask you to send payment to addresses that eBay has not
confirmed as belonging to that account – you might send your money
and receive nothing in return.
6. Look out for sellers who suddenly change what they sell: Sellers
can look like they’ve made lots of transactions, when really they’ve
never sold anything of worth. If they suddenly start selling $1,000
televisions, steer clear – the chances are they’re planning to run
off with the money.
7. Beware the shill bidder: If someone who doesn’t seem to have
bought anything before is constantly outbidding you on a certain
item, be suspicious. It might be a seller ‘shill bidding’ to force
up his item’s price.
8. Don’t use the seller’s escrow service: If an escrow service is
recommended to you by a seller, it could well be owned and run by
them – and they’re quite likely to keep your money and send you
nothing.
9. Pay electronically: You are more likely to be able to recover any
losses if you pay using a credit card instead of sending out cheques
and money orders – these low-tech payment methods can’t be tracked
as easily.
10. Buy from reputable sellers: Each seller has a number next to
their name, which is their feedback rating. The higher this rating,
the more you can trust them.
On that last point, feedback ratings are the most important way that
buyers and sellers can protect themselves on eBay – and you, as a
buyer, have a rating too! Now that you won’t get ripped off, the
next email will be all about your rating, and what you can do to
make sure people know that you’re not going to rip them off either.

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