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E-bay shoppers beware....
On Wed, 5 Dec 2007 19:49:31 -0800, Mike penned the following well
considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: |I just got a really high quality spoofed.... "please send me an |invoice for the item you sold" .....eBay email. | |Make sure the links match the stated URL..... | |I get 4 or 5 of those a week. As you stated, make sure the links match the |stated URL. It's the easiest way to avoid these phishing emails. | Here is a good resource for identifying phishers..... http://www.phishtank.com/ -- Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. Homepage http://pamandgene.idleplay.net/ Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguide http://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats ----------------- www.Newsgroup-Binaries.com - *Completion*Retention*Speed* Access your favorite newsgroups from home or on the road ----------------- |
E-bay shoppers beware....
You're right on all counts Tom. However, many times there are good buys to
be had on EBay. I already know going in what I'm willing to pay, but I *never* bid until the last 10 seconds of an auction. Why start a bidding war when there's 5 day left? I put in my maximum bid, and when there's 10 secs or so left, I hit confirm. Usually, no actually every time, I've won the item for less than my max (if I win). The trick is to have two windows open. One listing the auction, that you can refresh to get the time left, and the other, your bid window with the confirm button. Some sites (non-ebay) don't allow this (like for some sporting events), and if someone places a bid with less than xx seconds left, the auction is extended for 5 more minutes. Sellers on ebay would love that, but buyers would rebell. --Mike "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Wed, 5 Dec 2007 19:47:12 -0800, "Mike" wrote: They say it's not by stealing usernames and passwords, there's another method... wouldn't elaborate (I don't blame them). I changed my password anyway. ;-) There are lots of scams on eBay and I've been a "victim" in the sense that I was out bid, then asked if I wanted to buy after the "winner" backed out. It works like this - you put some items up for sale, get some of your friends to bid, use different computers yourself to get the bid up under false names and drive the bid price up. I know this happens because I had somebody tell me that's how she does it for glass jewerly materials and her own creations. Not everybody scammed by having their accounts taken over is stupid and phished - there has to be a hole in the system in more than one place. I gave up on eBay after bidding on some of the deep blue Ande fishing line I like to use. When the price went past what I can get a 1,000 yard spool for from Cabela's or Bass Pro by a few dollars, I noticed it was all the same bidders. Then I watched the next sale on the same stuff and it was all the same bidders pushing the price up. It's all a scam and as an "auction" site, it ain't what it used to be. |
E-bay shoppers beware....
In article ,
Mike wrote: :You're right on all counts Tom. However, many times there are good buys to :be had on EBay. I already know going in what I'm willing to pay, but I I agree...there are some very good buys to be had on EBay. Just recently I picked up a used Volvo prop in excellent condition for less than 1/3 what I would have paid anywhere else, and that included a $17 shipping charge. |
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