
11-16-2018 12:52 AM
I sold a camera today. The winner was from Canada, with 0 (zero) feedback. The account was created in 2018.
I have got a reply that he has issues with his PayPal and he offered to pay via e-Transfer.
He even sent me $40 dollars more to expedite the shipping.
I accepted the money and now they are in my bank account. The name on the e-Transfer matches the name of the eBay account.
Is there anything suspicious here??
Thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.
11-16-2018 02:00 AM - edited 11-16-2018 02:06 AM
Assuming it was Canada's Interac e-Transfer between Canadian banks/credit unions then you will have no problems.
http://interac.ca/en/faq.html#faq_137
Interac e-Transfer is a fast, secure and convenient way to send money to anyone in Canada from within the security of your online banking service. It uses email or text messaging for fast notification to the recipient that a transfer has been sent, while the participating financial institutions transfer the funds using established and secure banking procedures.
Once a transfer has been deposited, it cannot be cancelled or reversed.
Like using cash, you should send money transfers only to parties you know and trust.
....
I suspect the buyer was worried about the Canada Post strikes when they added extra money for faster shipping. And new buyers can have issues dealing with paypal.
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11-16-2018 01:15 AM
It almost sounds to good to be true, but maybe not. If the e-transfer works like it has for me in the past, then as soon as you accept the money it's yours. But to be safe maybe contact your bank and ask if e-transfers can be cancelled, find out the particulars before mailing anything. It sounds like by the amount that was paid for shipping, tracking should be included, and that will help also protect you from any scammers. Good luck!
11-16-2018 01:28 AM - edited 11-16-2018 01:29 AM
He even sent me $40 dollars more to expedite the shipping.
Oh really?
Why?
Did you not have any shipping price on the listing?
Is the customer in a country you don't usually ship to?
It is the seller's perogative to choose how she will be paid and what shipping service she will use.
Both of these perogatives are Seller Protections.
Talk to your bank manager.
If and when you ship pay the $1.50 for Signature Confirmation. The parcel will not be left unattended on the doorstep. Cheap insurance.
And just for giggles, look up the customer's address on Google Maps.
I once ended a Dispute by mentioning in the Message that my buyer should ask at the cafe next door to her house if the parcel had been delivered there, and that I was fascinated that her house was even narrower than my first home. Either the package was found or I scared the bejeebers out of her .
Scammers like anonymity.
I am old and cynical.
11-16-2018 01:31 AM
I am in Canada and he is in Canada.
I checked the street view on google maps and it's actually a house 🙂
My main concern is. Is there any chance eBay to reverse the eTransfer? No right? Because paypal did one time..
11-16-2018 01:34 AM
You're in Cyprus? Or are you in Fort Mac? (I have a niece there, and two grand-nieces.)
And while you have been selling, you just returned to selling recently and are still working with a Hold on your Paypal account.
This shouldn't affect your Canadian customer. And e-transfers are pretty new here.
Cameras are a high value/high fraud category.
11-16-2018 02:00 AM - edited 11-16-2018 02:06 AM
Assuming it was Canada's Interac e-Transfer between Canadian banks/credit unions then you will have no problems.
http://interac.ca/en/faq.html#faq_137
Interac e-Transfer is a fast, secure and convenient way to send money to anyone in Canada from within the security of your online banking service. It uses email or text messaging for fast notification to the recipient that a transfer has been sent, while the participating financial institutions transfer the funds using established and secure banking procedures.
Once a transfer has been deposited, it cannot be cancelled or reversed.
Like using cash, you should send money transfers only to parties you know and trust.
....
I suspect the buyer was worried about the Canada Post strikes when they added extra money for faster shipping. And new buyers can have issues dealing with paypal.
-..-
11-16-2018 05:38 AM
Not sure about convenient. Or fast.
My gardener wants to be paid that way, but after spending half an hour in the bank doing the transfer, I told him he could take my darn cheques and be glad of them. He knows where I live after all.
I am old and cranky. I'd tell him to get off my lawn, but that's what I'm paying him to mow.
11-16-2018 12:42 PM
I am from Cyprus but currently living in Fort McMurray 🙂
11-16-2018 03:57 PM
@reallynicestamps wrote:Not sure about convenient. Or fast.
My gardener wants to be paid that way, but after spending half an hour in the bank doing the transfer, I told him he could take my darn cheques and be glad of them. He knows where I live after all.
I am old and cranky. I'd tell him to get off my lawn, but that's what I'm paying him to mow.
I have both sent and received interac e-transfers.
I can send with just a few clicks in less than a minute. Receiving is even easier and faster.
You state "in the bank", you can't do an interac e-transfer IN a bank, you do it online!!!!
Log in to your online banking.
Click the transfer button.
Enter the email address you are sending to.
Enter the security Q/A (the recipient must enter the answer to accept the transfer).
Done!
You don't need to know anything about the recipient other than their email address, the recipient doesn't need to know anything other than the answer to the security question.
Once accepted an e-transfer cannot be reversed by ANYONE.
11-16-2018 06:51 PM - edited 11-16-2018 06:52 PM
If it's already in your bank account then I think it's pretty safe, but it doesn't hurt to phone your bank to double check. Is it a really fancy / rare camera? Just asking out of curiosity.
I guess they sent you the extra $40 in hopes that you'd send it with xpresspost or maybe private carrier like Fedex or UPS.
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@reallynicestamps ROFL
11-16-2018 08:06 PM
As recped mentioned it takes a couple of minutes (or less) to go online and send or receive an etransfer from within Canada.
11-17-2018 12:58 AM
@reallynicestamps wrote:Not sure about convenient. Or fast.
My gardener wants to be paid that way, but after spending half an hour in the bank doing the transfer. . .
Well, there's the problem. You were trying to do it from the bank, and not in the comfort of your own home. 😜