Subject:
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Re: Learning experience on eBay
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Newsgroups:
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lugnet.market.theory
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Date:
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Wed, 22 Mar 2000 18:37:43 GMT
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Viewed:
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897 times
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Scott A wrote:
> Then, when I parted out the next one and listed it, guess what happened.
> Yep, the same guy started bidding on the whole car again. I mailed him thus:
> "You cancelled bids on my 8448 parts auctions last week. I note you have bid
> on more of my auctions. If you cancel your bids on these ones _after_ the
> next 24 hours has passed, I will leave negative feed back."
You know you can cancel his bids, Scott? I think you'd be totally
justified in doing so. That would maybe be more of a substantive
comeback and would protect you from him doing it again.
Kevin
--
Personal Lego Web page:
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/kwilson_tccs/lego.html
eBay auctions:http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/kevinw1/
Subscribe to my Lego auction mailing list:
http://www.onelist.com/subscribe/Legopartsales?referer=1
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Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: Learning experience on eBay
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| (...) I agree, and he can't leave negative feedback for you that way, because it will have to be transaction-based. Rather, you will be able to leave an explanation on why you cancelled his bids--this is one of the good things about eBay being (...) (25 years ago, 23-Mar-00, to lugnet.market.theory)
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Message is in Reply To:
| | Re: Learning experience on eBay
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| On the subject of bid retractions. I've been running auctions of parted out 8448s. I split the 8448 down to 5 lots. With the last one I listed, a bidder try to buy the whole car this way. For the 1st 8 or 9 days he outbid every bidder just a soon as (...) (25 years ago, 22-Mar-00, to lugnet.market.theory)
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