
04-25-2017 03:22 PM
04-25-2017 04:59 PM - edited 04-25-2017 05:00 PM
eBay should be reminded of the following statement in each listing.....
Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.
Nothing can be added to a listing without a seller's permission...
and that includes the title.
04-25-2017 07:20 PM
I noticed some of my Facebook friends were welcoming home their university student children.
So I suppose eBay has loosed the latest batch of interns on the site.
Sigh.
Last year when the dotCOM Boards were redone- with all those very stupid Participation badges - the guy who designed it mentioned that he was proud that it had been accepted and implemented before he had been with the company for three months.
Well. My goodness. Isn't that special.
04-25-2017 09:59 PM - edited 04-25-2017 10:00 PM
@femmefan1946 wrote:I noticed some of my Facebook friends were welcoming home their university student children.
So I suppose eBay has loosed the latest batch of interns on the site.
Sigh.
Last year when the dotCOM Boards were redone- with all those very stupid Participation badges - the guy who designed it mentioned that he was proud that it had been accepted and implemented before he had been with the company for three months.
Well. My goodness. Isn't that special.
Ah yes, enthusiasm untempered by experience and lacking any knowledge of the past....
04-25-2017 11:30 PM
04-25-2017 11:43 PM
Thank you for bringing this up, as I rarely use the app and wouldn't have known otherwise.
The main problem I have with this is the verbiage. On a computer, when a seller's listings are "new" (as in, newly listed), this little grey icon shows at the beginning of the title...
...which is fine, because it's clear that the "new" is referencing the listing, not the item. Simply saying "brand new" is very confusing. And "nearly new"? What constitutes "nearly"?
Add to that, another board user used to quote a stat, which I don't remember exactly, but it was something like two-thirds of views on listings are on a mobile platform, meaning a lot of potential buyers will be seeing these labels and perhaps confusingly assuming that the product is "brand new", not the listing.
Oh, Weekly Chat Session, where art thou?
05-01-2017 03:58 PM
@thestuffofchris wrote:
...which is fine, because it's clear that the "new" is referencing the listing, not the item. Simply saying "brand new" is very confusing. And "nearly new"? What constitutes "nearly"?
New without tags = nearly? I haven't looked at this in some time but if I recall correct they were mapping to the item condition.