
12-17-2013 01:27 PM
12-17-2013 01:37 PM - edited 12-17-2013 01:38 PM
Quite some time ago the ability to leave FB for communication was done away with when there was none.
That's an interesting question though.
That is, if there is no communication for most of the duration of the transaction, does the ability to leave FB become available once an email has been sent to the seller?
I'm guessing the answer is yes, but with all things eBay nothing is ever simple.
They've complicated their site way beyond what is necessary and as a result have endless loops of nonsense.
12-17-2013 03:40 PM
They've complicated their site way beyond what is necessary and as a result have endless loops of nonsense.
I have to agree.
12-18-2013 02:31 PM
And the most annoying and misunderstood Rating "Shipping Time" is still open to accidental abuse.
Many buyers think this means how long delivery took, which is up to the shipper/postal system, when it is supposed to indicate how quickly the seller got it packaged and into the mailstream.
So, two Ratings move to automatic. One is widely misunderstood. And the Shipping Price? Well, few buyers do any shipping and are unaware that the cost of shipping is unrelated to the value of the item.
Sigh.
I'll shut up now.
12-18-2013 03:19 PM
12-18-2013 03:23 PM
12-18-2013 04:44 PM
12-18-2013 06:54 PM
12-18-2013 07:00 PM
12-18-2013 07:45 PM - edited 12-18-2013 07:48 PM
That's not my point, though. My question to you is: How can a buyer open a dispute when the item has been received and the item is as it was described in the listing?
Or to put in another way: Disputes are about the item, not the shipping method or price. Most listings don't list the shipping weight of the item and I'm not sure if it would be given any--um--weight in a dispute.
12-19-2013 10:24 AM
12-19-2013 11:25 AM
in this case i would be a lot easier to just report it, keep your feedback and DSR factual then move on. at least you know who not to buy from.
if this seller is an habitual, it will catch up with him/her
12-19-2013 11:41 AM
Possibly but Paypal stickers, which are more commonly used, both for convenience and the higher discounts, do not have the postage listed.
And again, the postage on the sticker is not the cost of the CPO sticker. Not noted are GST and fuel surcharges, nor the 5% (?) VentureOne discount.
Even if you use stamps, you may be buying discount postage lots from a fellow eBay seller, so the dollar value shown is higher than what you paid out for them.
12-19-2013 12:09 PM
"in this case i would be a lot easier to just report it, keep your feedback and DSR factual then move on. at least you know who not to buy from."
Most buyers don't look at feedback and even less at the DSRs.
12-19-2013 12:31 PM - edited 12-19-2013 12:32 PM
@73rhc wrote:
Let's put it this way. If you pay for xpresspost and the item shows up via regular surface. So that the seller can put extra $$ in his pocket. I think you can open a dispute for not getting what you paid for.
But the item in a dispute has to be physical and tangible. Shipping isn't that. You can certainly open a dispute over shipping, but I doubt that PayPal would let it be escalated to the claim stage because of that.
12-19-2013 01:01 PM
12-19-2013 01:05 PM - edited 12-19-2013 01:06 PM
12-19-2013 01:09 PM
@73rhc wrote:
So is it okay then for an honest seller to use the eBay shipping calculator, lose the 10% and absorb the cost of the packing materials. Then get get nailed with low DSR and possible neg. feedback? This is the original issue that I was asking about!
You asked nothing like this originally. You were commenting on the seller's use of "free" shipping and the inability to leave DSRs on shipping when the seller offered it as a "free" service.
12-19-2013 01:14 PM
12-19-2013 01:22 PM