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Comments Addressed
by acdickson
AC was pleased to see some comments on his last post, so he thought he better address them as two of them offer a chance to spin his web of eBay musings a little wider.
First off, Honey, a fellow urban honker, has a nasty situation with a seller that I'm saddened to say I've heard too many times before. In short, a keyboard (musical, not computer) purchased for a decent price, arrives broken. Consulting a fellow gearhead confirms that there was no way it could have been damaged in transit. The seller who had answered her question "is anything broken?" responded no, then fell back on his AS IS policy as stated in the auction description for protection. Honey already left good feedback after getting the keyboard and having it turn on okay. She was overcharged on shipping and might not have gotten this crook to purchase the insurance she paid extra for. She also suspects some fishy bidding on the item.
Did I say crook? Yes I did. Assuming he sent this thing broken, which it sounds like he did, what the gentleman committed was mail fraud. Saying something is not broken when it is, especially in writing, is against the law. At least I think it is. This guy is a crook and one of the bad apples that ruins eBay for all.
As for insurance, if you still have the box the keyboard came in, you should be able to tell if he paid for the insurance. There will be a green or blue sticker on it with a insurance #. If it's not there, he didn't pay for it. If it is, you can try and get the post office to cover the costs of the item (no easy feat, but possible with time and patience), but it sounds like it wasn't the post office's fault. It was the crooked seller.
So what to do? I'm sure you've already emailed him several times, but in your next one, I would tell him that you have consulted a repairman specializing in this particular model who will sign a statement swearing to have inspected it and conclusively proving it was broken before shipping. Then, explain that saying something is AS IS is all fine and well but since you have written proof (in the form of email) that AS IS was in this case nothing wrong, he has lied about the condition and in your estimation broken the law. Explain that you would be happy to return the keyboard for a full refund, or accept $100 back to repair the machine. If he will not do this, you will contact eBay, his local police, and file a complaint against him with the Post Office. If he specializes in music instruments it also might not hurt mention you're a touring musician and prolific blogger who will make sure your circle of friends will not buy from him.
(Note: AC doesn't actually buy that many things and hasn't had to go after a naughty seller. If anyone out there has and has a better suggestion, especially on what agencies to contact, please comment with your advice. Going to eBay Live and explaining the situation in a chat with a eBay representative might also be a good option, as they can likely advise you who to contact.)
Perhaps he'll make good on this. I wouldn't be surprised if he offers $50 back. But he may call your bluff. If this happens, you either go after him as you said you would which won't be fun and will take time, but may eventually get him to make good on this exchange. Or you chalk it up to one of those karma things. It'll come around on him one way or another, and perhaps that extra $100 spent will allow you to write some extra nice music.
If you had not left feedback yet, you might be in a better position, but you may not be. If the seller is semi legit and honestly thinks the thing worked and just doesn't want to make good on it, leaving bad feedback or threatening to will get results. But if this is a truly crooked seller, he likely has more than one selling account and will simply move on when this account gets shut down for too many bad feedbacks. How to tell? Hundreds if not thousands of feedbacks? The former. Dozens? The latter.
Lastly, you mentioned some potentially fishy bidding. There are eBay users who set up second and third accounts to bid up their own items. This is called shill bidding and is illegal, but very hard to monitor. You can, however, check the bid history of a seller's items over the last 2 months (check their feedback, click the link to the item number of something they've sold, then click on the bid history). Do you see the same users almost winning on big ticket items that the same person normally wouldn't want? That's not conclusive evidence, but enough to imply you think he's up to no good. If so, that might be another part of your argument for a quick refund.
Hope that helps!
Now, on to the second comment. "Daddy Fool" was kind enough to leave the quickly yanked auction description on Vincent Gallo's sperm. A careful reading reveals that it's most likely the work of an aspiring comedian. (Although you never know, Vincent Gallo is the man who refused any magazine interviews about his film Buffalo 66 unless he was given the cover, and requested the podium at the Republican National Convention after billboards of himself receiving oral sex were taken down in LA. The man has cajones). There is certainly a coffee table book and most likely a new category of art in these types of postings. An auction like this probably needs to get a good couple thousand hits before eBay catches wind of it to yank it. That's a lot of eyeballs.
I'd be curious to know if this was primarily pulled because Gallo's people objected to it (and its racist overtones), or if it came from his camp but violated eBay's ban on selling people and body parts of any nature (that goes for celebrity fingernail clippings as well), not to mention sperm donation bylaws. Anyone?

Comments
Also, if Honey paid by paypal, paypal has a strict buyer protection policy. if you complain to paypal saying that you either didn't receive something or it arrived broken, they will give your money back (taking it directly out of the seller's account).
the process is long and arduous, but worth it.
Posted by: hoppock at November 25, 2005 3:53 PM
AC
As a long time acquaintance of Vinny Gallo, I'd say it was actually him and that it was pulled because of the racism.
DF
Posted by: Daddy Fool at December 1, 2005 4:33 PM
first off andrew, thanks for addressing honey's questions. she has been doing a bunch of selling on ebay lately and you are our guru!!!!!
as for vincent gallo. i think he wrote it himself. if you go to http://vgmerchandise.com/
you can see that he is selling a bunch of his stuff for lots of money. all with "witty" descriptions......half way between being funny and being a complete jack ass, and i would venture to say that that's always been his style....
one more idea:
maybe a downloadable pdf of your guide to powerselling? perhaps even charge a dollar? could be cool!
adam
Posted by: adam forkner at November 25, 2005 12:50 PM