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#1
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Posted By: Frank B
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#2
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Posted By: Steve Murray
Though the Rules are unwritten the following pretty much sums up sentiment on this board: |
#3
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Posted By: Ed Ivey
A very concise summary. Thank you, Steve. I move (though my motions carry no weight) for a referendum to add it to the rules icon, perhaps with the heading "overall board sentiment". "Unwritten rules" tend to make unwitting and well-intentioned people feel unwelcome. Just my opinion |
#4
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Posted By: T206Collector
...bidding on something, by asking a question on here you are giving that auction free advertising and potentially making it more expensive for yourself. |
#5
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Posted By: leon
I agree...I might post this in the rules section but caveat it as preferred policy and not a steadfast rule....We have debated it and I am still not convinced it can ever be a steadfast rule....Nice suggestion...regards |
#6
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Posted By: Brian McQueen
A good question and I would agree with Steve's response. I would propose one little amendment onto Steve's summary which basically encompassed Ebay. My thoughts involve questions that pertain to items in house auctions. Granted, questions for these items would be fewer in number because there are fewer concerns about cards being authentic, trimmed, etc...However for house auctions I always thought the following was sound, however "unwritten" guidelines. Anyone is free to agree or disagree with what I have before. This is just my opinion so feedback is welcome. |
#7
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Posted By: howard
Why is it considered bad form to discuss a miscategorized item that is up for auction? I assume it is because it could prevent a buyer from getting it at a much lower price than it would fetch if properly listed. However, in another current thread several posters opined that it is poor form for sellers to "troll" for suckers by listing high BIN prices. It seems like some forum members hold a double standard whereby it is OK for a buyer to to take advantage of a naive seller but not for a seller to take advantage of a naive buyer. |
#8
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Posted By: Paul S
Howard, the "reasoning" I have read by some on this board about a buyer getting a piece at below market value is something to the effect that, "Well, I've spent a lot of time and effort gaining knowledge of the subject and prices and therefore I deserve to be rewarded for that." Not saying if I agree with it or not, that's just how I've understood it. |
#9
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Posted By: howard
I hear you, Paul and I agree with your assessment. My question was, more or less, rhetorical although I am interested in opinions on the subject. |
#10
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Posted By: Joann
OK Steve. I think I just had this huge logic collision in my brain. It may have broken something. |
#11
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Posted By: Matt
I disagree with rule #3 - if something is suspect, I am interested in knowing about it, even if it is miscategorized. I am betting that the added cost of the item given the extra exposure will NOT outweigh the amount I can be scammed by a fraudulent listing. I would rather sometimes pay more for an authentic item then sometimes get scammed by a seller. |
#12
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Posted By: Joel
Do people really search by catagory on eBay? When I search say for a Ryan rookie card I just go to search and type in '1968 ryan'. that's going to pull all of them up regardless of what catagory they are in. |
#13
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Posted By: Matt
Joel - many of us monitor different ebay categories for 'deals' - we're not looking for something specific enough that we can type in exactly what it is. |
#14
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Posted By: T206Collector
...backward shop for baseball cards, but it only takes two people to find something on ebay and bid on it to make the "deal" a "not a deal". |
#15
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Posted By: Fred C
I'm in agreement with most in that I wouldn't want to see an auction outed that is for an item that is poorly listed in the wrong category. I don't think "outing" an auction from the Pre-1930 category is really "outing" an auction. Also, as mentioned, sometimes a poorly listed item doesn't get purchased for a good price because two very interested parties found it. Sometimes you might get a bargain and sometimes you don't. |
#16
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Posted By: Red
What percentage of "outed" auctions are simply the seller, consignor, or accomplice devising a creative way to drum up interest in a particular item? |
#17
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Posted By: Steve Murray
7% |
#18
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Posted By: Matt
Red - I think that's why there's opposition to outing an auction unless it's because there is something fishy going in, in which case it would be quite a risk for a seller to out their own itme by saying it looks counterfit. To get back on point, I'm interested in discussion of Steve's rule #3 which I disagreed with above on the grounds I think it's better for the industry if we always out questionable items. |
#19
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Posted By: Anonymous
Steve, I'm not sure if 7% is correct. I calc'd it out to about 6.72%. Can you please do the math again? Perhaps you missed an auction or two. |
#20
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Posted By: Eric Brehm
My opinion: |
#21
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Posted By: Fred C
A few years ago I'd find items improperly categorized. In one instance it was misplaced to the point where I'm sure most people would have missed the auction. I was trying to be a nice person and I told the seller what the item was worth. The seller asked where to place the item. I gave them good directions. The item sold for a few thousand. I never got a thanks from the seller so after that I stopped telling people about their potential ending bid prices. I figured the heck with it. |
#22
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Posted By: Dave S
Categorized correctly, categorized incorrectly...all that accomplishes are more gray areas to differ and argue... |
#23
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Posted By: Eric Brehm
Dave S -- I'm just curious, could you explain exactly why you think a live auction should not be outed? Is it to protect buyers or sellers or what? Maybe I'm missing something. |
#24
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Posted By: Dave S
Eric--To protect those bidders who are actively interested in buying that card. As someone stated earlier, outing that item is going to increase it's exposure tremendously. And bids from those who may never have seen it... |
#25
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
Some folks want to have rules about auctions in progress to inject a bit of hide and seek into the matter. |
#26
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Posted By: Eric Brehm
Dave -- okay, thanks, that's what I figured was the reasoning, I just wanted to check. I can certainly understand that sentiment, however my feeling is that all you are doing by limiting the exposure of a public auction is rewarding people who spend a lot of time browsing eBay and/or are good at doing searches. And yes, I would feel that way even about something that I myself was interested in, that I hoped I would get at a good price. If nobody else sees it, and that's how I win, okay fine I got lucky, but I get no particular satisfaction out of that. |
#27
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Posted By: Matt
"On the other hand, and you raise a very good question, I wouldn't think that members of this forum should systematically look for good deals out there and broadcast them for everyone here to try to take advantage of. I guess that would be a bit too much interference in the fair operation of the market. Hard to know where to draw the line there." |
#28
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Posted By: Frank B
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#29
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Posted By: Dave S
Hypothetical question? |
#30
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Posted By: Eric Brehm
Matt -- okay, agreed. But are you opposed to discussing (and in the process revealing) a live auction where there is no question about the authenticity of the card, and where the seller has an impeccable reputation, just to limit the number of bidders who know about it? |
#31
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
Let me see... the seller would get more for his card. He'd be in favor of it. |
#32
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Posted By: Fred C
And people wonder why bidders try to get a seller to end an auction early. |
#33
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Posted By: Eric Brehm
I would think that the central purpose of this forum is to discuss general questions related to vintage baseball cards, not to fuel the commercial marketplace, so I wouldn't think you would want to bring up the Drum back card in Dave's example just to alert potential buyers that one is for sale, particularly in this case because you know it might be tricky to find. But if you had some question about the card -- say you had never seen that front/back combination before and wondered about the history behind it -- I don't see why you couldn't mention that particular card, even while the auction was live. But then again, if you wanted to win the card, I can see why you would wait until the auction was over to bring it up. |
#34
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Posted By: barrysloate
You can take this a step further and argue that even bringing up an auction that just ended can cause problems. Here's an example: |
#35
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Posted By: Matt
Eric- I'm not opposed to what you suggest - I was arguing for less strict rules about "outing" against what Steve proposed. Seeing as how there are some who oppose ANY outing, I was trying to suggest a compromise position that we could all agree on. |
#36
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Posted By: barrysloate
The sales are binding but not everybody is ethical. And if I got a great deal on ebay and saw it discussed on the board before I received it, I probably wouldn't be happy. |
#37
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Posted By: Larry
I think all auctions, live or closed, should be open for discussion at any given time. |
#38
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Posted By: Joann
I still think that the way Steve M and Brian put it is best, in terms of whether something is miscategorized or not. |
#39
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Posted By: Matt
JoAnn - your suggestion of explaining it to people after the auction is over misses the point of the outing in the first place, which is to stop people from getting scammed. Once the auction is over it's too late. |
#40
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Posted By: Joann
Yes - I agree. But that's why I specifically added the argument that outing the routine reprints and alterations probably does very little by way of actually saving someone from accidentally bidding on these. |
#41
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Posted By: Matt
JoAnn - I don't think there will be a rush of people admitting they can't recognize "obvious" reprints for fear of embarassment. I know when I first joined, the outing of questionable listings/reprints helped me and so I try and return the favor to others. |
#42
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Posted By: Joann
Actually Matt, you have got me thinking about something with this discussion. |
#43
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Posted By: Matt
JoAnn - as always a pleasure to discuss with you. |
#44
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Posted By: Eric Brehm
I am having a great deal of trouble following these last bits, I'm not sure why. But I'm glad this conversation is continuing. It is an interesting discussion, that I don't think should be taken off-line; there does need to be a consensus and a policy on this so posters will know what they should or should not do. |
#45
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Posted By: leon
I need about an hour to read all of the well thought out and friendly debates above....but this is exactly the reason there will never be a formal policy about outing auctions. It's too split. There are many reasons why there shouldn't be a "rule" against it. One thing I AM IN FAVOR of is outing a bad auction. Recently, I outed the Gypsy Queen auction that said "Large" on the PSA holder and in the description (If I remember correctly). I did it because it wasn't a large one and I didn't want anyone to bid on it as a large one. I am in favor of outing auctions like that but you better have your ducks in a row...On that occasion I did. I did ask another board member if I should out it, before I did it, and he agreed that I should ....so I did...best regards |
#46
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Posted By: Joann
Actually, Matt, I have these two really great scans of 33 Goudeys (I think a Ruth and maybe a Gehrig) that show perfectly what it looks like when someone clips corners and then tries to round them. |
#47
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Posted By: Matt
JoAnn - "I just really strongly believe that it's not worth outing a miscategorized auction if you are not rock-solid, 100% sure. 100%. If you are going to potentially cost someone thousands of dollars, I think it's the least one can ask is that you be very, very sure you are actually giving a valid warning and not just throwing something out as a maybe." |
#48
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Posted By: howard
I agree with Frank and Eric 100%. That's what I was getting at when I originally posted early in this thread. Not outing auctions does not "protect" anybody. Any buyer savvy enough to troll for miscategorized cards doesn't need protection. If anything it is the seller he seeks out that needs protection. |
#49
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Posted By: Randy Trierweiler
If any & all auctions were allowed to be "outed" for any reason, how long do you think it would take for the board to turn into a "check out this auction" board? People we've never heard about would be asking questions about this auction or that auction, when in reality they are outing the auctions for their friends intentionally. |
#50
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Posted By: leon
That is one issue that I raise both eyebrows about whenever I see something outed. I don't expect your concern to ever be a major problem as it's one of my/our biggest concerns.. regards |
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