pentaxuser said:
Maybe I don't fully understand the e-bay system and if so, I need to be better informed but if there is a bid and there is, then under what circumstances can it result in a no sale. As I understand the rules the bidder is now committed to a buy. If the bidder is the seller then doesn't this show up when payment is made via paypal to an address. If a friend is bidding then it could be hidden but doesn't the seller pay a fee to e-bay which means that he is out of pocket once the friend returns the item bought and the seller returns the amount the friend buyer spent securing the item. The self same item has then to be sold again but presumably only after a reasonable interval otherwise a pattern shows up which warrants investigation
There appears to be 2 bids several hours apart. If this is one and the same bidder then surely this is obvious to e-bay and an investigation ensues.
Otherwise the system is really wide open to abuse and genuine bidders are less assured of a fair outcome than the christians were of their outcome in the Roman Coliseum with the lions.
Pentaxuser
First off, if there is a reserve price and it hasn't been met, no one -- high bidder or seller -- is committed to anything. That isn't the case here.
Secondly, it is possible for a bidder to put in more than one bid. The visible price is then the first one he placed. Bidders do this for several reasons. One is to signal "I'm serious about this thing, don't bid against me." I once offered a Novoflex semi-automatic bellows for M42 on eBay and the eventual winner put in four (4) bids in rapid succession. Another is that they've changed their mind about how badly they want the thing.
I know a fellow who puts in a "stake in the ground" bid early in an auction to discourage the seller from selling the item off eBay and then puts in a serious bid near the end of the auction. He claims this gives him time to think things over and assess as much of the opposition as manifests itself early.
If a shill bidder wins or if the high bidder reneges, the seller can file a non-paying bidder form and recover his seller's commission, but he's out the listing fee, which is based on the starting price and other details. Using shills is neither riskless nor costless.
It sometimes happens that the seller discovers that the item is not as described after the auction has closed. Or he drops it. In this case, seller and buyer can agree not to transact. But again the seller is out the listing fee.
In my experience, people who gripe about bidding shenanigans have either been outbid and failed to steal the item or have gone a little crazy and paid more than, after reflection, they thought was fair.
Remember, the bidder tells eBay the most he'll pay. If he's honest with himself and wins the auction, he has nothing to complain about. If he's honest with himself and loses, the same goes. If he's not honest with himself, well, I'm sure you can guess what I think of him.
As I see your "Christians," they're either stupid or crazy or ignorant of the market.
FWIW, I often fail to steal items on eBay. Many's the time I've set up a low snipe and been outbid by people who valued the item more highly than I did. I don't like it, but I don't see anything unfair about it. If I'd valued the thing more highly, I'd have bid higher.
I practically never rebid or reset the snipe I've queued up as I see how an auction progresses. Other people's evaluations of an item don't change mine when I'm trying to buy. Once or twice, though, when I've discovered that something I didn't value much was worth a lot more than I'd paid for it I've put it on eBay post haste and informed the losing bidders on the one that taught me the thing's true value.
Cheers,