| Hopefully
you are already aware of some of these.
It doesn't necessarily follow that if one
of these applies the auction or person is
fraudulent. But if you use your head, and
build up a view of the overall
transaction based based upon a number of
these factors, you will reduce your
chances of getting conned. a) Stock photos
and descriptions
Because
they don't have the item they are
"selling", some fraudsters use
a stock photograph of the item. And they
will probably use the manufacturer's
product description too. So, stock photos
and no original description might be a
sign. Search for other auctions by the
same seller, and see if they are brazen
enough to advertise the same item more
than once.
b) A
price too good to be true often isn't
true
A
fraudster wants your money quickly, so
you may find they offer to close their
auction early with you as the
"winner" having bid a price
which you know to be somewhat of a
bargain. Why would anyone close their
auction early if the price hadn't reached
market levels? I'll give you one guess.
c) High
value or high volume, newly registered
sellers
Although
the vast majority of new sellers are
genuine and honest, be cautious of buying
from people selling high value items in
bulk, very early on in their eBay career.
This pattern isn't quite normal. Think
back to your own first sales. You would
have been tentative, and probably have
tried single, low value items initially.
So, a new seller fitting this profile may
be someone who has perhaps been
previously suspended and has registered
another ID.
d) 1 day
listings
Although
1 day listing are used by genuine sellers
who have more than one item or who want a
quick sale, unfortunately this duration
is attractive to fraudsters too. They
sometimes use a 1 day auction duration to
gain a quick sale before their actions
can be reported and acted upon. So, be
extra wary on auctions with 1 day
listing.
e)
Invitations to trade off-eBay
This is
a classic ploy of fraudsters. Having made
some kind of contact with you, or you
with them, they will invite you to
purchase or to sell off eBay i.e. without
using eBay's auction services. The
attraction here to the fraudster is that
they can drive the transaction along the
lines they prefer, whether that be
escrow, PayPal etc. Another reason why
trading off eBay is not a good idea is
that you have to keep your own formal
records of the transaction, and you
forfeit any cover from eBay buyer
protection and PayPal buyer protection.
Plus, and this might be a minor point,
but you will not be able to leave
feedback to let others know your
experience with this seller/buyer.
f)
Payment methods with no recourse
Fraudsters
prefer to chose payment methods in which
the buyer has no protection, like wire
transfers where the buyer has no way of
tracing where the money is going. Western
Union Money Transfers and BidPay are
favourites and should be totally avoided.
Postal orders are similar although they
are a popular payment method among the
genuine sellers as they require no
clearance time. Bank transfers and
cheques can only provide the possibility
of your bank investigating the details of
the account the money was transferred
into. For the best protection use Paypal
and fund with a Credit Card. Note there
are limits on eBay and PayPal protection,
and you should make yourself aware of
what these are.
g)
Unusual sales pattern
If your
seller's feedback indicates that they
normally deal in collectables, DVDs or
other specific items, be suspicious that
they are suddenly listing laptops, plasma
TVs or other high value items. The change
may indicate that this seller's account
has been hijacked.
h) Bad
english gives you a pointer
Some
fraudsters operate from abroad but
pretend to be in UK or USA. As they
aren't particularly adept at the english
language they might use a translation
tool like Babelfish to create their
emails to you. So, watch out for emails
that are not good english. In itself, it
doesn't prove anything, there are plenty
of genuine eBay sellers for whom english
is not their first language. But it might
add to further evidence you have.
i)
Location Location Location
In the
case of lazy fraudsters you might find
their locations don't match up. By that I
mean the auction says the goods are in
the UK, but the seller's ID details show
their location to be, say, Ukraine. This
is not a good sign. Often in these cases
if you contact these sellers you will
receive an excuse as to why the item is
not in the UK, and therefore can't be
collected in person. In short, if an
auction says the item is in the UK and
the seller says that it is not, I would
avoid the auction. And don't forget to
cross check with their PayPal account,
and see in which country this resides.
j) Ask
questions
Always,
always ask your seller a question. Any
question. Their response, if you receive
one, will help you judge how genuine the
seller is. Beware auctions that carry a
message asking you to contact the seller
via a given email address as opposed to
via the 'Ask seller a question' link.
This could be an account hijacker trying
to prevent buyers from 'Asking the seller
a question'. They want to stop this from
happening because such questions could be
routed to the real account owner.
k)
"eBay can vouch for me" email
A
warning about a relatively new tactic
used by fraudsters. If you are proving
hard to land as a buyer/seller, they may
claim they can get eBay to email you
proof of their validity so that you can
trust them. eBay, of course, will NEVER
do this. The email sent out, however
authentic looking, is fake and is
designed to get you to part with your
money or your goods. This applies equally
to Square Trade and PayPal. They will
never email you certifying the
genuineness of anyone.
l)A
PayPal warning
There
are fraudsters who use stolen PayPal
accounts to accept payments. To lower the
possibility of this, check your seller's
location as shown in eBay, and then see
if it is one of PayPal's permitted
countries by clicking here: http://www.workwinners.com/nlr701.htm. If PayPal don't
offer their service in the country that
the seller resides, be very wary.
m)
Passwords
Never
have the same password on your eBay and
PayPal accounts. Or indeed on any other
financial or personal site. Change your
passwords every 30-60 days on both eBay
and PayPal.
n)
Escrow
If your
seller asks you to use escrow, and
proposes an escrow company they've used
before, this is a clear indication they
are fraudulent. There are many fake
escrow sites which will take your money
fraudulently. The only escrow site
recommended by eBay is http://www.escrow.com. An alternative
in the UK is http://www.auctionpix.co.uk Please don't be
tempted to use any other escrow company,
however professional looking their
websites might be. It is a fact that 99%
of escrow companies on the internet are
fraudulent. They are set up solely to
defraud money out of unsuspecting buyers,
and to get goods without paying for them
from unsuspecting sellers.
o)
Pointers in feedback
Try to
read the positive feedback as well as the
negative. Read the way your seller
responds to negative feedback as this
will often give you an idea of how the
seller will react if something goes badly
wrong. If the seller is offering high
value goods, be wary if their feedback
has been built up quickly from low value
purchases. Also, if the overall rating is
good, but there are a disproportionate
number of negatives in recent days/weeks,
this might indicate the account has been
taken over. Finally, be aware that
feedback is not the guarantee it once
was. Feedback can easily be manufactured.
Also, if the user ID has been hijacked,
you'll be reading the feedback of the
original account owner, not the person
with whom you're currently dealing!
p)
Credit Card payment
For high
value items, or for amounts of money you
can't afford to lose, make sure you pay
by credit card which has online fraud
protection. This will give you some
recourse if the seller is fraudulent. In
this context, paying via PayPal is not
the same. PayPal do have a buyer
protection scheme, but there are criteria
which the eBay auction has to satisfy in
order to qualify. Even if the transaction
qualifies, PayPal's standard protection
currently has a maximum value of $1,000.
Note that payment by debit card provides
zero protection.
q)
Address and Telephone check
Use the
Ask the seller a question link, and
request they email you with their address
and telephone number. Any reputable
seller will give you their address and
telephone number. When you get the
number, call it, and see if you get
through to the genuine seller.
r)
Keystroke capturing virus
This is
a computer virus which you inadvertently
download onto your PC. It's task is to
capture the keystrokes you make, and to
send them to the virus placer. The
fraudster then uses pattern recognition
software to identify and extract personal
information, like username, password,
credit card numbers etc. To avoid this
happening to you, it is wise to have
good, up-to-date virus, firewall and
spyware checking software on your PC.
Here is where you can get free software
for each of these functions:
Virus
protection - http://free.grisoft.com/freeweb.php/doc/2/
Firewall
- http://www.zonelabs.com/store/content/company/products/znalm/comparison.jsp?lid=ho_za
Spyware
checking - http://www.lavasoft.com/support/download/
s) Shill
bidding
Shill
bidding is where people work in cahoots
to inflate the bidding on an item. A
seller has a "partner" who
makes bids on the seller's items with a
view to bumping up the bid price. They
have no intention of buying the item.
Fortunately, shill bidders and their
associated seller can be stupid. The
shill bidder will usually makes bids on
other items from the same seller. Here's
how to check to see if shill bidding is a
feature of a particular seller. First,
look at the seller's closed auctions over
the last 30 days. If most of the closed
auctions have no bids, it is unlikely the
seller has shill bidders working with
them. If all of the closed auctions have
bids, take a look at the bid history. See
if the same bidder appears in the list of
bidders, usually with aggressive bidding
and normally at the start of the auction.
If so, you may have uncovered a shill
operation, so avoid that seller's
auctions.
t) Keep
your transaction information
Keep
your own record of the transaction when
you're buying. Don't just rely on eBay.
You want a record of the seller's
identification, the item description,
emails sent and received, plus the time,
date and price of your bid.
u)
"I noticed your bid...."
Never
deal with anyone who contacts you after
seeing your bid on another auction. They
will say something like, "I saw you
bidding on that digital camera. I have
the same model available for sale. I
don't have time to list it on eBay. It
has more accessories than the one you
lost out on. You can have it for
xyz." If you bite, they'll probably
take you down the fake escrow route.
Also, if you entertain this proposition,
you're operating outside of eBay and
therefore have no auction protection
whatsoever.
v)
Changed eBay ID
Never
deal with anyone who has a changed ID
icon next to their name. This icon menas
they've changed their ID in the last 30
days. Few legitimate people change their
eBay ID. When was the last time you
changed yours? There's a 1% chance that
an ID change is genuine, but 99% that it
is fraudulent. Why take the risk?
w)
Changed email address mid-stream
If a
seller or buyer changes their email
address on you in the middle of a
transaction, stop dealing with them. It
is likely their previous email account
was closed down due to some irregularity
- such as a previous victim reported
them. If you think about it, why would
any genuine buyer or seller change their
email address whilst corresponding on a
transaction they wish to conclude
expeditiously?
x)
Complications
Never
get involved in any transaction where the
seller/buyer tries to introduce a third
person into the financial arrangements.
They might ask you to pay xyz, who will
then pay the seller, and you will receive
a discount or commission for your
co-operation. Such proposals are always
fraudulent. They prey on greed. Don't be
tempted.
y) Time
is of the essence
This is
a scam which is has more potential for
success than traditional phishing
attacks, as it is time sensitive. The
fraudster searches for high value
auctions that have just ended. The bid
history for an auction contains
hyperlinks to each bidder. The fraudster
checks to see if the winning bidder is
selling any items of their own. If so,
they go to that auction and embed a
request for payment from the first
auction within a question for seller.
This works because winning bidders are
expecting request for payment shortly
after an auction ends. A variation of
this is to offer a bidder a "second
chance". This time the "Ask the
seller a question" email pretends
that the real winner has backed out, and
offers the item at a lower price. The
buyer, believing the story, is lured into
paying to whom they believe is a genuine
seller. Many eBayers have heard of the
second chance system, but have no
experience of it. This unfamiliarity
coupled with the fact that a few weeks
might have passed, makes this an
effective method for fraudsters. The
moral of this story is never get involved
in any transaction which arrives in your
inbox via the Ask the Seller a Question
feature.
z) eBay
IDs
Never us
your email address as your eBay ID, or
part of your eBay ID. Fraudsters have
software which monitors internet traffic
looking for information such as this. If
your eBay ID and email address are the
same, it is simple for a fraudster to
plausibly communicate with other eBay
members in your name.
That's
all in my list. If you have any further
ideas on how to prevent fraudulent
transactions on eBay, please let me know
and I will promote these through future
newsletters.
In the
meantime, be aware, and be safe in your
eBay buying and eBay selling.
|