
08-18-2016 03:16 PM
Solved! Go to Solution.
08-18-2016 04:47 PM - edited 08-18-2016 04:48 PM
"are you serious or joking?"
I am very serious.
I am always aggressive with crooks. About fifteen years ago I had a Canadian buyer place a bid on one of my $5,000 lot. He refused to pay. I sent him a bill for $500 handling fee. It took about three weeks (and I had to contact one of his family member to shame him) but I got paid my $500.
There is nothing to lose in sending the crook an invoice. He may think twice about doing it again.
"If he doesn't pay the invoice, I can open a paypal dispute? " No.
08-18-2016 03:26 PM
Contact the Chinese seller and ask for his email address
Once you have the email address send him a PayPal invoice for $100.00 for using your images.
08-18-2016 03:26 PM
@eurobeads wrote:
So I'm browsing Alibaba a few days ago and I come across a Chinese seller who has thieved at least 10 of my eBay item photos (necklaces) and is selling them for pennies. Seller's entire Alibaba store inventory is made up of stolen designs/eBay photos from various eBay users, mostly North Americans. This includes MANY original handcrafted items by a US seller. And this is what the **** Chinese are resorting to now: they are stealing our designs, our photos and selling OUR products in bulk for $0.10 a PC. So now I'm watermarking all my photos. What a pain in the behind.
Everywhere I look, people are taking the easy way out at others' expense. And I'm so sick and tired of these Canadian sellers who lie to their customers claiming their items are Pandora and selling them for double market value, hoarding the search & browse with their fraud.
And no, flagging doesn't work 99% of the time.
Why is it SO difficult for people to run an honest online store without cheating, lying and stealing?
I don't know, it's like people who put "gold" and "silver" in their titles when they are selling things which are not "gold" or "silver"!
08-18-2016 03:37 PM
I suggest you "watermark" your images... this will help protect them from being copied.
08-18-2016 03:42 PM
Gold and silver can be used to describe a color as well. Do you think that it shouldn't be used to describe jewellery as a color in the title at all or does it depend on where in the title it is being used?
08-18-2016 04:16 PM
It's keyword spamming when it's in the title of a jewellery listing.
It's misleading when it's used in a title for a jewellery listing where "gold" & "silver" are commonly used to describe the material the item is made from.
"silver alloy", "gold toned alloy" both are weasel words that tell you nothing.
08-18-2016 04:20 PM
08-18-2016 04:32 PM
What does "silver alloy" mean? 1% silver, 10% silver or just some metal that has a silver colour?
What does "gold toned alloy" mean? Is there any actual gold or just the colour that is "gold"?
Normally I wouldn't care but you are the one who commented on a lack of "honesty".
08-18-2016 04:47 PM - edited 08-18-2016 04:48 PM
"are you serious or joking?"
I am very serious.
I am always aggressive with crooks. About fifteen years ago I had a Canadian buyer place a bid on one of my $5,000 lot. He refused to pay. I sent him a bill for $500 handling fee. It took about three weeks (and I had to contact one of his family member to shame him) but I got paid my $500.
There is nothing to lose in sending the crook an invoice. He may think twice about doing it again.
"If he doesn't pay the invoice, I can open a paypal dispute? " No.
08-18-2016 04:51 PM
08-18-2016 05:28 PM
If buyers actually knew the difference they wouldn't be buying millions of cheap trinkets from China thinking they were actually getting real gold or sterling silver.
If my listing says I charge $4 for shipping that is EXACTLY what I charge, what the shipping actually costs me isn't relevant at all.
08-18-2016 05:29 PM
How can you ask for email address when the eBay system don't allow it?
08-18-2016 05:35 PM
It is not eBay. Please read the thread from the beginning.
08-18-2016 06:27 PM
08-18-2016 06:43 PM
08-19-2016 07:38 AM
US seller was using my pictures for more than a month and he sold more then 10 pcs of the same product i emailed him contact ebay few times and what.My hard work was filling someone else pocket.......
08-19-2016 10:35 AM - edited 08-19-2016 10:36 AM
eurobeads: This isn't intended to put your product down in any way. In fact, I've often wondered why what you are doing isn't done more often.
I recognized your charms right away as those sold by Chinese sellers for a few pennies/charm (literally).
These charms are very common from Chinese sellers and for every style of charm there are hundreds of sellers.
How do you know they've "borrowed" your photos and why would they?
08-19-2016 10:42 AM - edited 08-19-2016 10:42 AM
I thought you were selling finished pieces but I just read your description.
It looks like you're selling the charm without the chain and setting but picturing it like a completed piece?
Your description says "Does not include chain."
If that right?
08-19-2016 01:36 PM
@pierrelebel wrote:Contact the Chinese seller and ask for his email address
Once you have the email address send him a PayPal invoice for $100.00 for using your images.
Good advice. I have other sellers on ebay and elsewhere stealing my photos on a regular basis. Reporting it is s effective as banging my head with the phone. Instead, I will send the thieves invoices now for the use of my photos, I bet that will stop it quicker than anything else I could do.
Thanks, Pierre,