Fuck Ebay

Tuesday, December 15, 2009 - One thing lead to another... Google Whitman + Crackwhore =


Google
Meg Whitman Crackwhore

http://purpleavenger.blogspot.com/2007/06/ebay-seller-fines-400k-for-price.html

Sunday, June 10, 2007

eBay seller fined $400,000 for price manipulation

Its been a while since I did anything on eBay, but even a few years ago it was plain that some sellers were shill bidding and complaints were falling on deaf ears at eBay.

There's no real motivation for eBay to crack down on shill bidding -- it drives up their commission revenues.

Apparently pressure from the NY AG's office and the magnitude of this fraud was enough to finally get eBay's attention...it certainly wasn't complaints from ordinary users.

eBay is an evil company with the ethics of a $5 crack whore.


http://www.scientificamerican.com/podcast/episode.cfm?id=597C6DC0-E7F2-99DF-3AD9AC6F383A289B

January 25, 2007 | 1 comments

Scam Artists Manipulate Ebay With Penny Sales

Research shows that unscrupulous sellers use penny sales to boost ratings before trying to make big auction scores.

 
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(get the PDF to see the entire matter, including the appendix and references - IF you want to research or more fully understand this subject)

The Art of Deception through buying Ebay Feedback with Penny Sales.

are.berkeley.edu/.../BrownJen--Reputation%20in%20Online%20Markets.pdf

Reputation in Online Markets: Some Negative Feedback

                          Reputation in Online Markets:
                               Some Negative Feedback
                                                 Jennifer Brown
                            Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics
                                       University of California, Berkeley
                                                  John Morgan
                          Haas School of Business and Department of Economics
                                       University of California, Berkeley
                                                 February 2006

                                   February 2006
Abstract: Online markets have dramatically altered the retail landscape. By
eliminating barriers associated with geography as well as the physical costs of
maintaining a storefront, online markets have created a “democracy” of buyers
and sellers. However, the fluidity of this marketplace poses unique challenges—
owing to the relative anonymity of transactions, the need for trust is paramount.
Solving the “trust problem” represents a key competitive advantage for many of
the successful players in the online space. For instance, much of the remarkable
success of eBay has stemmed from its ability to create valuable and informative
reputations for its users through its feedback system. The lock-in associated with
a user’s reputation on eBay helped it to stave off challenges by Amazon and
Yahoo. We highlight how eBay’s solution to the “trust problem,” has led to the
existence of a “market for feedback” whose sole purpose is the “manufacture” of
reputation for eBay users. We present a case study and statistical analysis of this
market and show it as a crucial challenge to eBay’s future competitive advantage
and, more generally, to solving the “trust problem” in other online markets.


1 Introduction
While measuring the Internet’s reach is far from an exact science, no online census reports would
dispute claims that hundreds of millions of individuals across the world are active Internet users.
Internet traffic rankings suggest that these users conduct online searches—Yahoo!, Microsoft,
MSN and Google take the top four spaces in terms of unique visitors.1 But many of these users
do more than simply surf the web—they participate as buyers and sellers in a vast, global bazaar.
Two online marketplaces, eBay and Amazon, are among the top 10 most visited sites on the
Internet and, indeed, more than 627 million people globally shopped online in 2005.2
EBay is a giant in the online marketplace. With 135 million registered users listing more than 1.4
billion items in 2004 alone, eBay dominates the online auction industry.3 From its humble
origins as a marketplace for Pez dispensers, eBay has grown to be the fifth most visited web
property in the US.4
Throughout its relatively short history, eBay has faced serious challenges to its preeminence in
the US. Its most notable rivals, Amazon and Yahoo, entered the online auction space in the late
1990s, undercutting eBay’s fees and using their considerable online presence to promote their
auction sites. EBay continues to face stiff competition worldwide—for example, Yahoo is the
principle online auction site in Japan, and a host of local competitors as well as Yahoo in the
emerging Chinese market.
How was eBay able to survive these early challenges and expand its market share to 64.3 percent
by 2001?5 What enabled eBay to grow into such a dominant player? What does the future hold
for eBay and online marketplaces more generally?
Online auctions are what economists term “two-sided markets”—the greater the number of
buyers and sellers using the exchange platform, the more valuable the market. An online seller’s
revenue increases with the number of interested bidders, while an online buyer benefits both in
terms of increased product variety and price competition with more sellers. Because service
                                                2
provision entails large fixed costs, yet low variable costs, platforms for online auctions exhibit
strong “network effects”. The economics are similar for a wide range of other online platforms
including Amazon marketplace, Google Adwords, as well as price comparison sites such as
Shopper.com and MySimon.com,
Other markets exhibit similar network effects—consider the markets for online search, operating
systems, and office software suites. However, unlike these markets, electronic marketplaces face
an enormous “trust problem” which may limit their growth. Specifically, a buyer in an online
marketplace faces the risk that the seller will deliver an item which differs substantially from
what was promised in the item description, or not deliver a product at all. The ease with which
sellers can set up and take down virtual “storefronts” only exacerbates the trust problem. Thus,
bidders in online auctions will discount their bids in anticipation of such undesirable events. This
problem was even more pronounced when access to digital photographs for item listings was
limited. Moreover, early in eBay’s history, the majority of items for sale were used. The trust
problem is apparent—only sellers of poor quality items would be interested in the discounted
bids offered by eBay buyers. Those with high quality used items would prefer to sell elsewhere.
Thus, eBay faced a key challenge in establishing a successful marketplace for online auctions:
how to solve the trust problem.
The trust problem was not eBay’s only worry; eBay’s first-mover advantage was facing
determined competition from Yahoo and Amazon. In other markets, such as online search and
office software suites, firms with large first-mover advantages such as AltaVista and
WordPerfect were eclipsed by such formidable rivals as Google and Microsoft, respectively.
Thus, first-mover advantage alone was clearly not going to be enough to secure eBay’s
dominance in the online auction industry—eBay needed to retain customers who were facing a
growing selection of online auction platforms. 6
EBay’s reputation system neatly solves both the trust problem and the customer retention
problem in the face of entry. The key to solving the trust problem is to provide good sellers with
the incentive to list products on eBay, as well as to create a mechanism through which those
good sellers could signal their quality. By allowing buyers and sellers of completed transactions
                                                  3
to offer publicly observable feedback to one another, a good seller builds a history of success and
has an advantage in terms of buyers’ trust, and possibly premium prices, for future sales on the
site. At the same time, negative feedback makes it more difficult for bad sellers to masquerade as
good sellers while passing off inferior or non-existent goods on unwitting buyers. Thus, the
reputation system enables a form of trust to be built—good sellers are rewarded for providing
high quality service and bad sellers are punished by the loss of future sales or lower prices or
both. As a consequence, a wide variety of new and used products are now regular eBay fare.
The feedback system also solved the entry problem by creating customer stickiness through
switching costs. For instance, consider an eBay seller with a large number of positive feedback
points which attracts premium prices. Despite lower selling fees on upstart Yahoo Auctions, such
a seller would be reluctant to switch—switching would mean rebuilding its entire reputation on
the rival site and enjoying less than premium prices during that process. Thus, even if the seller
were able to attract the same number of potential bidders by switching sites, it is far from clear
that the switch would be worthwhile, even with lower fees. The case for buyers is less direct.
While a buyer also has a reputation on eBay which conveys some advantages, the cost of “multi-
homing” between eBay and rival sites is fairly low. However, if the reputable sellers do not
switch to the rival site, both the variety and quality of merchandise available on the other site is
likely to be lower. Indeed, anecdotal evidence suggests that this is exactly the situation faced by
buyers on eBay’s rival sites—less reputable sellers selling lower quality merchandise with less
product variety. EBay’s reputation system has created substantial switching costs that rival sites
find difficult to surmount, even through lower fees.
While eBay’s feedback system has proven remarkably effective in solving the trust problem and
maintaining competitive advantage in the face of entry, eBay faces a number of challenging
future growth opportunities. Most notably, eBay projects that the bulk of its growth in the US
online auction market will come from the sale of high-value items such as vehicles, artworks,
and real estate. High-value transactions lead to substantial listing fees to eBay. In the last two
quarters of fiscal year 2004, eBay reported that its motors category reported 50 percent growth in
transaction value.7 Furthermore, the motors category accounts for more than 33 percent of all
transaction value in fiscal year 2004. EBay’s recent purchase of the online voice communication
                                                  4
service Skype provides further evidence that the company expects growth in high-value items;
eBay’s chief executive officer, Meg Whitman, claimed that the acquisition will make online
trading easier for eBay users, especially for “big ticket” transactions.8
Robustness of the reputation mechanisms is essential for growth of big ticket transactions in
online marketplaces, and eBay in particular. The central dilemma is that the value of a “good
reputation” to a bad seller, which would allow him to imitate a good seller, is considerably
higher in markets for high-value items. Thus, even if a seller ruins his or her reputation after only
a single large transaction, the gains from a successful scam might well be worth the cost of
increasing his or her reputation. Clearly, the cost of “investing” in reputation is key. In this
paper, we will show that the feedback system, which has served eBay so well and is a model for
solving the trust problem in many online marketplaces, is a potential “Achilles heel” in terms of
growth opportunities for high-value items. In particular, we show that the cost of investing in
reputation is relatively small and, through a case study, illustrate how some sellers have already
moved to take advantage of the opportunity.
Abuse of the feedback system is not the only challenge that big ticket items bring to the online
marketplace. Fake high value items are also an increasing problem. Again, without trust, the
presence of fakes threatens to undermine the entire online marketplace for certain types of goods.
For instance, a recent lead article in the New York Times brought attention to the active market
for fake collectible jewelry on eBay.9 While eBay claims that only a small fraction of its listings
offer fraudulent goods, some experienced users and legitimate companies such as Tiffany
Jewelry suggest that the sale of counterfeit items is much more pervasive in the market. An eBay
spokesman is quoted saying, “...we don’t have any expertise [in the goods sold on eBay]...
We’re experts at building a marketplace and bringing buyers and sellers together.” The size of
the market and the volume of trade are both evidence of this managerial expertise, yet the
suggestion of widespread fraud may be troubling for eBay. The notion that counterfeit goods are
circulated in anonymous markets is not astounding, but does eBay’s reputation system not serve
to reduce the prevalence of such fraud? Expert legal opinion highlights eBay’s role as an online
powerhouse—if a pending court case proves that eBay facilitates fraud, the decision could affect
not just eBay, but the future of ecommerce in general.10
                                                  5
With its powerful online presence and significant contributions to the Internet economy, eBay’s
successes and failures have widespread impact beyond collectibles and cars. While the lessons
drawn here are in the context of eBay, the importance of building reputational systems has broad
applicability, especially in online markets. For example, reputational systems are important in
the battle for competitive advantage among e-retailers and business-to-business auctions, and in
the growing online dating markets.11
Before proceeding, it is useful to explain the process by which buyers and sellers obtain
“reputation” on eBay. At the conclusion of each completed transaction on the site, the winning
bidder and the seller have an opportunity to submit “feedback” for each other through the eBay
system. Feedback consists of a rating—positive, neutral, or negative—as well as a brief verbal
description of the quality of the transaction. “Great buyer. Prompt payment.” is an example of
the qualitative feedback submitted after a typical transaction. While numeric ratings and
comments are assigned on a per-transaction basis, feedback summary statistics are tallied by
unique user. The most prominent feedback indicator appears next to users’ identification name
on the site and is the overall user feedback total, calculated as the sum of all feedback points (the
number of unique users awarding positive points minus the number of unique users assigning
negative points to the user). Other users may click on this summary score to view a more detailed
description of the users’ feedback information such as the exact number of positive, negative,
and neutral feedback over several time periods as well as the detailed comments. Importantly,
information about the item from which the feedback was derived is only available for 90 days
following auction close. That is, once the links to past transactions have expired on a users’
feedback page, it is impossible to tell whether a “reputable” seller obtained that reputation by
undertaking many large scale transactions or the same number of trivially-sized transactions.
Obviously, a buyer might draw very different conclusions about the quality of a given seller were
he or she able to assess the source of that seller’s reputation.
2 How Valuable is Seller Reputation?
For eBay’s feedback system to succeed in solving the trust problem, it must be the case that
                                                   6
reputable sellers enjoy price premia and higher probability of making a sale relative to less
reputable sellers. Absent such differences, reputation has no value. Thus, one may naturally ask:
“Are differences in sellers’ feedback ratings indeed reflected in prices or the probability of
sales?” In general, higher positive feedback ratings are weakly correlated with price premia—
there appear to be diminishing returns to feedback levels. In contrast, negative feedback is
strongly correlated with lower transaction prices overall and unsuccessful auction listings.
Lucking-Reiley, Bryan, Prasad, and Reeves find that positive feedback has no effect on prices
for collectible coins, while negative feedback reduces prices.12 Eaton examines electric guitar
sales and finds a similar pattern; positive feedback has no impact, while negative feedback
reduces the probability of a sale for sellers with low (less than 20) feedback points.13 Cabral and
Hortacsu conclude that neither positive nor negative feedback affect auction outcomes.14
Livingston uses eBay data from 861 auctions of a specific variety of golf clubs to examine the
effects of seller reputation on sales success and auction revenues.15 In contrast to the previous
studies, his results suggest that bidders are more likely to bid, and bid higher, when a seller has
positive feedback reports. While returns from increasing from zero to 1 to 25 points is
approximately 3.4 percent in terms of the probability of a sale and 5 percent in terms of auction
revenue, positive reports beyond the first 25 have little impact on how the buyer rewards a
seemingly trustworthy seller. Returns of feedback ratings in the highest quartile are positive
(approximately another 5 percent for probability of sale and revenue), yet the marginal return for
each individual feedback point must be extremely small if a user must accumulate more than 675
feedback points to enjoy this reward.
Several other studies also find that positive feedback had a positive impact on price.16 Moreover,
Ba and Pavlou use experiments in the field and find that willingness to pay increased with
sellers’ positive feedback.17 They also find that the positive effect increases with item value.
Resnick, Zeckhauser, Swanson and Lockwood organized a series of controlled field experiments
selling postcards on eBay.18 Two-hundred matched pairs of postcard lots were auctioned under
different seller identities, varying seller feedback ratings to identify the effect of experience and
                                                   7
reputation rating on sales. Initial seller feedback ratings varied from very high (net rating of
2000, with one negative point) to zero to negative (net rating of -2). Although Resnick et al.
cannot account for the possibility that sales to previous customers were responsible for the
experienced seller’s differential success (i.e. private reputation), their findings do suggest that
buyers are willing to pay approximately 8 percent more for lots sold by the more experienced
seller identity rather than the new venders. Perhaps surprisingly, they also find that negative
feedback has little impact on revenue.
3 A Market for Feedback
Why might one buy a low-quality digital photo of the Golden Gate Bridge for 50 cents, or ten
copies of an identical e-book? What motivates a buyer to pay 10 cents for a compliment
requested from a stranger? Among others, these are important questions that might be asked of
eBay buyers and sellers in a small, but active market for seemingly-valueless items online. The
answer, of course, is “positive feedback”.
Some sellers hide their offers in their text advertisements for emailed compliments (where a
successful bidder may request the exact phrasing of the praise) and digital photographs of
Bigfoot, national landmarks and Eminem. Other sellers offer explicitly to return positive
feedback (and only positive feedback!) to buyers who pay the small listing price. EBay’s search
engine makes the offers easy to retrieve—the term “positive feedback” will reveal hundreds of
listings for low-prices, valueless item designed only to artificially enhance users’ feedback
ratings.
But is this indeed purely a market for feedback, or are the items being sold on the market
actually otherwise valuable to buyers? We entered the market to investigate. We searched for
“positive feedback”, chose a representative listing, and bought the feedback point. Figure 1 is an
eBay screenshot from the auction. The seller offered a “Positive Feedback E-book” and promised
“Free Positive Feedback” for $0.01 including all shipping fees. Once the one-cent payment was
processed through Paypal, we received a three-page pdf file (Adobe Portable Document Format)
entitled “100 Feed Back in Only 7 Days” by Dave Robinson. The first page notified readers of
                                                 8
their re-sale rights to the document. The following is an excerpt from the e-book text:
        Look on eBay for items that cost next to nothing. You can find the eBay search feature to find
        items which cost anywhere from .01 to $1.00. Try this. ... Now bid on 100 items. If you want to
        speed things up a bit, try and find auctions with the “Buy It Now” option. If the seller offers
        PayPal as a form of payment, go right away and pay for the item. ... If you do this with a hundred
        different sellers you should be able to get your feedback score up to 100 in just a few days.
Strong anecdotal evidence suggests that this offer, sale and exchange are typical of the
transactions in the market for feedback. In fact, we purchased five feedback points over several
weeks and received this identical e-book from three different sellers located the US, UK and
Australia, respectively.
It is likely that buyers are already aware of this feedback-enhancing strategy, given their
participation in the auction. The email document provides both parties with evidence, however
thin, that their transaction was not a flagrant violation of eBay guidelines. Yet, for all practical
purposes, the item for sale was no “item” at all, but positive eBay feedback points. Indeed,
absent the potential for increased feedback, posting such a listing on eBay makes no economic
sense for the seller. It costs the seller 25 cents for the insertion fee and an additional 5 cents for
the Buy-It-Now option. By setting a Buy-It-Now price equal to 1 cent with free shipping, the
most the seller can hope to earn from this transaction is a 29 cent loss.
While buyers and sellers actively trade feedback, eBay aims to squelch any such market. eBay
explicitly prohibits the artificial enhancement of any member’s reputation by offering to buy, sell
or barter feedback.19 Members who violate the feedback-sale policy may be subject to listing
cancellation and forfeiture of fees, limits or suspension of account privileges, loss of
“PowerSeller” status and feedback removal. A brief, online justification for the policy reminds
users that eBay is founded on trust, and that feedback trade undermines the integrity of the
system. Despite the warning, our investigation reveals that eBay harbors an active and growing
market for user feedback, where buyers and seller coordinate to artificially boost their feedback
status.
Now, suppose a prospective “power seller” were to follow the advice of the feedback-enhancing
e-book. Translating the e-book’s guidance into a selling strategy is straightforward: list items at
                                                           9
low prices using words such as “penny”, accept Paypal and allow buyers to Buy-It-Now to
accelerate the exchange, and post enough listings to improve your feedback rating within days.
Would this advice be profitable? The case of thelandseller illustrates the potential impact of
artificial feedback enhancement. 20
4 Case Study: thelandseller
While the market for feedback is itself interesting, it is the possible impact of such a market on
business outside the feedback market that deserves attention. The case of thelandseller highlights
a selling strategy adopted by many participants and confirms our intuition that eBay users are
actually using the feedback market for gains in other markets. A registered user in the US since
March, 2003, thelandseller was an active participant in the market for feedback, accumulating
hundreds of feedback points over a single month.
Between June 5 and June 28, 2005, thelandseller posted 304 offers for feedback enhancement on
eBay. The majority of the listings were titled, “Riddle for a PENNY! No shipping - Positive
Feedback”. As suggested by the descriptive headline, the feedback solicitation is couched in an
offer of an inexpensive joke to be emailed to the buyer. While selling a joke alone is insufficient
evidence of feedback trade, two additional features of the offer are less innocent. First, the words
“positive feedback” are included in the title, ensuring that common feedback enhancing search
terms will identify the posting. Second, the total joke price including shipping, handling and all
other charges is one cent, and almost 95 percent of thelandseller’s listings are Buy-It-Now. That
is, thelandseller locked in a 29 cent loss even in the event of a successful sale. Were he a keen
eBay user trying in earnest to secure a profit selling jokes online, thelandseller would certainly
not be pricing below marginal cost.
If the advice offered in the feedback e-book were written from a seller’s perspective, it would
describe thelandseller’s strategy almost perfectly—price low, include words such as “positive
feedback” and “penny” in the item titles, and use the Buy-It-Now feature to speed feedback
accumulation.
                                                10
Of the 304 offers posted by the eBay user, thelandseller sold 212 jokes to 172 different eBay
users. Thelandseller’s net revenue from these activities was -$87.64 —nearly $90 worth of eBay
fees offset by only $2.12 in revenue. In addition, thelandseller purchased “Blonde Jokes Free
Shipping - Feedback!!” for £0.01 on June 17, 2005.
Closer examination of thelandseller’s profile is revealing—262 of the 864 total positive
comments were received from users who are no longer registered with eBay.21 Remarkably,
more than 400 of the 598 unique users who left positive feedback for thelandseller were
participants in the market for feedback.
Currently, thelandseller’s eBay feedback rating is 598 (100 percent positive). Counting only the
feedback transaction identified in our dataset, at least 30 percent of his positive reviews resulted
from solicitation in the feedback market. If we speculate that the 400 users identified as past
feedback-boosters also purchased only feedback from thelandseller, this statistic jumps to more
than 80 percent. All of the links to past joke (feedback) transactions have expired in the user’s
feedback profile, making the details of the transactions (except the feedback itself) invisible to
other eBay users. Now, it seems that thelandseller has more lucrative business plans than the
certain-loss market for online jokes.
While thelandseller’s behavior in the feedback market is interesting, it is his or her activities
outside of the market that make for a compelling case study. True to his name, thelandseller now
sells undeveloped land in Texas that he claims is zoned for a future lakeside housing subdivision.
According to the text in one land listing, he represents a private investment group specializing in
the buying and selling of North American properties. The land parcels, which appear for auction
approximately every three weeks, have opening bid prices between $2,200 and $6,000US,
depending on the lot characteristics. Photos, maps and other deed details are provided for
prospective bidders. Text in the listing states that the properties may be valued up to $12,000US.
Sometimes listed in pairs, at least 11 lots of land have been posted for auction since thelandseller
exited the market for feedback.
At least one of the parcels of land was sold on eBay—thelandseller left positive feedback for the
                                                  11
buyer after the completion of the sale in mid-October, yet the buyer did not reciprocate. The
buyer has subsequently left feedback for transactions with other eBay users, however.
Clearly, thelandseller is a sophisticated user who used the feedback market to artificially boost
his online reputation to appear experienced in the market for a high-valued good. A back-of-the-
envelope calculation illustrates the cost of becoming “experienced”. Consider the extreme case
where all of his feedback was acquired by penny sales—assuming that 70 percent of his listings
resulted in sales, thelandseller could have create his feedback profile for approximately $360.
While we cannot know whether thelandseller is a good or bad seller, it does seem clear that the
market for feedback has allowed thelandseller to create a false sense of experience and,
therefore, trustworthiness.
5 Statistical Study of Market for Feedback
While the case study above is suggestive of the relationship between the market for feedback and
a seller’s other activities, it is useful to examine the market for feedback in greater detail. To this
end, we obtained data for over 6,500 listings in the market for feedback over the period from
June to December 2005. Below, we describe the data collection procedures and a statistical
analysis of key features of the market for feedback.
5.1 Description of the procedures for the study
Using a custom-designed computer script, we gathered data on eBay’s market for feedback on a
weekly basis. The automated script was designed to query the set of terms listed below, and then
retrieve data from completed auctions. 22 Based on manual searches we conducted in the market
for feedback, we found that the following search terms successfully captured the vast majority of
transactions in this market: “build feedback, eBay reputation, eBay rating, ebook feedback, free
feedback, free joke, free jokes, free riddle, get feedback, gmail feedback, gmail rating, golf shots
hr, increase feedback, new to eBay, ebook money, positive feedback, positive reputation, riddle
no, rocket feedback.” We also used the misspelled search term “postive feedback” since
misspellings in subjects headings are not uncommon.
                                                   12
Each listing was carefully hand-reviewed to verify that it was, in fact, only soliciting feedback
exchange. Any listing also offering a tangible, otherwise valuable or non-feedback good was
excluded. For example, if a seller promised matchbooks, coins, online data storage or low-value
long-distance telephone cards along with positive feedback, the observation was removed from
the dataset.
In total, 6,526 unique listings posted by 526 sellers were retrieved in January and May 2005, and
weekly from June 2005 to December 2005. Seventy-six percent of the listings, 5,127 items,
resulted in a sale. More than 80 percent of the auctions were listed with the Buy-It-Now option,
whereby a seller sets a fixed price and no bidding auction is conducted for the sale.
Table 1 provides summary statistics of the data.23 Several features of the table are noteworthy.
First, unlike most other eBay markets, the average opening price is higher than the average
winning bid. Average opening price includes many offers with Buy-It-Now prices set equal to $1
(or £1 when listed in UK pounds), and these listings often failed attract to bidders—not too
surprising given the price points of the available alternatives offered by other sellers. Variation in
the shipping charge for the “virtual” goods sold in the market for feedback is also surprising.
While no postage was involved for any of the items traded in our data, some sellers sought to
attract bidders by setting an extremely low (often 1 cent) Buy-It-Now price and to earn profit on
the shipping and handling charge. Notice that seller profit is miniscule in this market—averaging
about 8 cents. As the case of thelandseller suggests, however, sellers enter this market not to
earn profits in the market for feedback itself, but rather to leverage the reputation gained in this
market to obtain price premia for other, presumably larger, transactions.
Turning to the characteristics of participants in this market, the median seller has a feedback
rating of 135 whereas a winning buyer has a much lower “reputation” with a feedback rating of
only 19. Sellers take advantage of the economies of scale inherent to the market for feedback; the
median seller listed 51 items in the market for feedback during the period of our study. Put
differently, if the median seller were to succeed in selling all of his or her listings during the
period of our study, the transactions would raise his or her existing reputation by 38 percent. As
                                                 13
on the rest of eBay, negative feedback is rare—the median seller enjoys 100 percent positive
feedback. Thus, sellers seeking primarily to build rather than rehabilitate their reputations are
entering this market.
5.2 Results
Unlike the usual eBay assortment of electronics, collectibles and cars, feedback is created by the
transaction and is not scarce in any traditional sense—no single user has inherently more to
exchange than another. Moreover, buyers and sellers in this market may transition without
substantial cost from one role to the other. Facing the appropriate incentive, a feedback buyer
can easily become a feedback seller, and vice versa. Users can move nearly costlessly between
buying and selling positions in the market, and because both users gain feedback through the
sale, prices represent cash transfers that smooth out the transaction frictions. While these features
make the data difficult to interpret directly, they also make the market for eBay feedback
empirically interesting. The theoretical justification for our valuation estimates is contained in
the Appendix.
Buyer Valuations
We find that an average buyer’s valuation for a point of feedback is at least 61 cents. While this
may seem like a relatively high valuation for a single point of feedback, it is important to note
that a buyer’s willingness to pay for a point of feedback in this market is an expression of the
discounted net present value of the stream of incremental future cash flows from this additional
point of feedback.
This calculation of buyer valuations was undertaken assuming that only a single price prevails in
the market for feedback.24 However, as Figure 2 illustrates, the dispersion of winning prices in
the market is remarkable; prices in completed auctions ranged from well below eBay’s seller fees
to nearly 10 times marginal cost. While the distribution is concentrated near 1 cent, there is also
considerable mass around $1.
The feedback profiles of participants in this market are also highly diverse. Seller feedback
levels range from 0 to 6,732, while winning buyers have feedback ratings ranging from 0 to
                                                 14
9,231. Previous empirical studies suggest that the marginal value of a point of feedback to a
buyer should depend on the existing reputation of that buyer. That is, buyers who already have
established reputations are likely to have a lower valuation for an additional point of feedback
than buyers with lower reputation. Since the feedback rating of the winning bidder is contained
in our dataset, it is possible to stratify the data by winners’ feedback ratings. We would expect
that the bound on buyer valuations would decrease with the feedback rating of the buyer.
In Figure 3, we divide winning buyers by feedback ratings to obtain valuation bounds for buyers
in each decile. As the figure shows, buyer valuations are mainly decreasing. For buyers in the
lowest decile, with feedback ratings of 4 or less, calculations suggest that they value a point of
feedback at, at least, 71 cents. In contrast, for buyers in the highest decile, those with feedback
ratings of 439 or higher, an additional point of feedback is worth much less—approximately 42
cents. Furthermore, the steep decline in the valuations of buyers in the highest two deciles
suggests that there is indeed “diminishing returns” to the value of an additional point of
feedback.
At first glance, these values may seem implausibly high. Yet, when one considers the potential
payoff of improved reputation in markets beyond the market for feedback, the average valuation
is not unreasonable. Consider the following example: Assume for a moment that an increase
from zero to 20 feedback points results in a 5 percent increase in auction revenue in an average
eBay product category such as golf clubs.25 A new user (with zero feedback points) wants to sell
a driver and expects to sell it for $250. If he purchases 20 positive points in the feedback market
for approximately $10.80, he can earn 5 percent more on the golf club sale, $262.50. That is, his
investment in reputation is more than offset by the extra auction revenue.
Is the market for feedback profitable to sellers?
As we saw in Figure 2, there is a considerable range in transactions prices in the market for
feedback. This also suggests that sellers experience a range of profit outcomes. One of the
unique features of this dataset is that seller costs (excluding hassle costs associated with posting
an item) are completely transparent to the researcher. As a consequence, we can determine the
profitability of each listing in our dataset. Figure 4 graphically displays the distribution of profit
                                                   15
and loss outcomes in this market. As the figure shows, the distribution of profits is bimodal. The
higher of the two modes, which comprises 1,100 transactions making a loss of 29 cents, arises
when sellers offer an item in the market for feedback at a Buy-It-Now price of 1 cent with free
shipping and handling. Since the insertion fee on the US eBay site is 25 cents and the Buy-It-
Now option costs an additional 5 cents at this price point, a seller’s costs for this transaction
amount to 30 cents; thus leading to a net loss of 29 cents. The other mode occurs at a profit level
of approximately 64 cents. This profit level, which occurs in 263 transactions, arises when sellers
successfully offer an item with a Buy-It-Now price of 99 cents and free shipping and handling.
Figure 5 illustrates the overall profit or loss obtained by each seller in our dataset. Most sellers
incur losses—the modal seller loses 30 cents per listing. Moreover, even for sellers setting an
item price equal to nearly one dollar, the feedback market is still relatively unprofitable, since
these items fail to sell approximately 45 percent of the time. Thus, about half of the 99-cent
listings lead to a loss of 30 cents while the other half (when the item sells) earn a profit of about
65 cents. The net expected profit from a 99-cent listing is only 22 cents. It should perhaps not be
all that surprising that the market for feedback is not a profitable one for sellers. As the case of
thelandseller illustrates, motives other than direct profits from feedback sales are often
paramount. Moreover, since there is an effectively limitless supply of the “good” in this market,
there is little reason to expect sellers to earn profits.
6 Managerial Implications
In markets with millions of nearly-anonymous agents buying and selling a plethora of goods,
trust is critical. Moreover, the higher the value of the items being bought and sold, the more vital
is trust to the successful engagement of buyers and sellers. As trade in high-value item becomes
increasingly profitable on the Internet, online merchants and auctioneers face enormous
challenges in overcoming the trust problem and creating attractive trading environments. Our
work suggests that one current “state of the art” solution, the trust system employed by auction
giant eBay, is vulnerable to being undermined in precisely those areas targeted for future growth.
Indeed, the impact of the market for feedback stretches beyond eBay. As new businesses enter
the online space, either as start-up e-retailers or virtual versions of established brick-and-mortar
                                                    16
stores, managers face the challenge of creating an environment of trust that attract and maintain a
stable customer base. While the enormous success of eBay might tempt the new managers to
emulate eBay’s feedback system, our work identifies a significant weakness and suggests that
solutions to the trust problem should be sought elsewhere. The need for new approaches to
online reputation systems is especially critical for firms seeking growth in emerging online
markets—e-retailers and auction platforms in these markets may face additional pressure as users
race to catch up to developed markets. And so, we ask: What can a manager do to build an
environment of trust online, without being vulnerable to markets for feedback that may
undermine the system?
While eBay’s existing reputation mechanism has seemed to work well for smaller items where
the benefit of investing in a “false reputation” is relatively modest, this is not the case for high-
value items. Moreover, as eBay attempts to expand internationally, particularly in developing
countries such as China, the need for reliable mechanisms to distinguish good sellers from bad
will be all the more important—especially since financial systems and credit card use are far less
developed in these new markets. The presence of markets for feedback suggests a potential
“Achilles heel” for eBay and other online auction sites seeking these growth opportunities.
As we have shown, there are several important problems in eBay’s existing reputation system
that are being exploited in the market for feedback. First, since reputation is not weighted by the
value of the transactions giving rise to the overall feedback score, there is no way for a buyer to
distinguish between a seller whose reputation derives from legitimate transactions and one whose
reputation derives from what are arguably only notional transactions. Second, eBay only retains
a detailed archive of the transactions comprising the reputation of a seller for 90 days. Thus, it is
possible for a seller to affect his or her perceived reputation by taking advantage of this short
time horizon of transparency. Third, since feedback is bilateral, eBay dilutes the incentives for
buyers to give negative feedback, even when a seller’s performance is not especially good.
Sellers can, and often do, retaliate against buyers leaving negative feedback by reciprocating the
negative review. Since the reputation of an individual on eBay is a composite of transactions
made as a buyer and as a seller, buyers who also sell items on eBay (or who expect to sell items
in the future) may be reluctant to risk their reputations by leaving negative feedback.
                                                  17
How can eBay address these problems? First, eBay may wish to offer transaction-weighted
reputational statistics based on the dollar value of the trade rather than the current practice where
the sale of a car and the sale of a digital photo of Bigfoot have the same reputational effect.
Second, given the dramatically falling cost of storage and computing, there would seem to be
little technological reason for eBay to limit the time horizon of its detailed archive of
transactions. More broadly, greater transparency in providing information about the past history
of a seller should improve the ability of buyers to distinguish between good and bad sellers, and
thereby avoid the trust problem. Third, there seems to be little reason to pool reputation earned as
a buyer and reputation earned as a seller. As we mentioned above, this pooling creates a
disincentive for honest reporting and helps to undermine the informational value of the system.
EBay could easily create separate reputational accounts for a given user, segregating reputation
by role.
Why doesn’t eBay and others then implement these solutions? For established platforms, such as
eBay, a central concern in any reform of an existing reputational system is that it will damage the
loyalty of its existing user base. For instance, how would existing feedback ratings be treated
under a system with transaction-weighted reputation? In principle, there could be adverse
litigation consequences from eBay from sellers who felt that their businesses were harmed by
such a change and who had relied substantially on eBay’s existing rules in determining their
business strategy. Such a change might also provide an opening for eBay’s formidable
competitors—Amazon and Yahoo—to grab market share at eBay’s expense. Thus, to some
extent, eBay appears to be “locked in” to its existing reputational system by virtue of its own past
success. One wonders, however, whether the pernicious effects of the market for feedback will
not ultimately undermine eBay’s competitive advantage for the future.
The managerial challenges in solving the trust problem differ for existing platforms and new
platforms. For existing platforms, the transition from current reputational systems to more robust
systems that can operate effectively for high-value items and emerging markets is a central
business consideration. For new platforms, the weaknesses in existing systems highlighted here
offer a unique opportunity to overcome the built-in first-mover advantages of the established
                                                  18
players and gain a competitive advantage by innovating new solutions to the trust problem.
The situation in trust markets appears to us to be analogous to that in online search in the 1990s.
At that time, the state of the art solution was to use data encoded in metatags to provide search
results. New players, such as Google, recognized the vulnerability of existing search engines to
manipulation of data contained in these metatags and were able to overcome first-mover
advantages enjoyed by established players, such as AltaVista. We see the same vulnerability to
manipulation in existing reputational systems in online markets and, perhaps, an opportunity for
another Google to leapfrog the competition with solutions that scale to high-value items and
emerging markets.
                                                 19
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About Me

Oh Ebay, thou art a pack of cunts. An enemy doth make of thy friends. Lies to cover lies to cover even more lies. When will it ever ende?

Recent Posts

• Whitmans own words show you exactly where she is at - Endorsed by her Buddy Condaleeza Rice
• Paypal and Microsoft fucks with Cryptome by blocking donations through Paypal.
• Hacking Paypal Accounts
• MEG WHITMAN - in her own MOVIES!
• 9 YEARS OF NON STOP SCAMS ON EBAY - BY EBAY
• Untitled
• The Women of the California Republican Party (The Whitman Supporters) Part 02.
• Giving Meg a Dinner Invite
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• Paypal was shit back in 2002
• The History of Paypals Criminal Activities
• The History of Ebays Fake Feedback Scam
• The Ebay Board of Directors Bribing Scandles.
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• Ebay FAKES it's own user numbers.... Part 2. How Ebay FAKES it's own user numbers.
• Ebay FAKES it's own user numbers.... Part 1. The insecure dormant accounts.
• Ebay Seller Feedback = Worthless & CHEAP to buy sell and trade.
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• eBay presented OZtion its 250, 000 users
• Meg Whitman - incest, child porn, bestiality, fetish porn, funding it and making money from it.
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• Ooooo Ebays CEO's play the political cards in both directions.
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• eBay Silences Founding 'Voices' Members - the Feedback Part 04.
• eBay Silences Founding 'Voices' Members - the Feedback Part 03.
• eBay Silences Founding 'Voices' Members - the Feedback Part 02.
• eBay Silences Founding 'Voices' Members - the Feedback Part 01.
• eBay Silences Founding 'Voices' Members - the Article
• Paypal - Idiot is - as Idiot does. Fucks with Legit Cash Transfers (Stupid).
• Nazi Paypal gets MORE Competition
• EBay Used Craigslist Users PERSONAL Information for ‘Data Mining’.
• For those who know the hypocracy of Ebay
• Interpretations of Reality - Meggy Sucks at Being a Suck.
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• Paypal Fee Sleaze and Feed Back.
• Paypal and Account Hacking and Identity Theft.
• Meg the Crim - Does her Buddies in
• Whitman and the Skype Aquisition Scam
• Ugly vs. Stupid
• Paypal Begins Pulling eBay Sellers’ Credit Reports!
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 11.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 10.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 09.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 08.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 07.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 06.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 05.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 05.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 04.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 03.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 02.
• Spin City: eBay Struggles to Control the Message (Auction Bytes) 01.
• Ebay awards PR Advertising Account to Edelman
• Ebay Plans Insurance scams Part 05.
• Ebay Plans Insurance scams Part 04.
• Ebay Plans Insurance scams Part 03.
• Ebay Plans Insurance scams Part 02.
• Ebay Plans Insurance scams Part 01.
• Does the Man with the Tin Hat tell the truth?
• ON a personal note......
• Whatever Was Meg Thinking (By a switched on Writer)
• The Real Reason Ebay is Stuck - By AliBaba.com
• Ebay's Pump and Dump bullshit vs. Consumer feed back
• Meg Whitman up on Anti-Trust Charges
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• Not only is Whitman a moron - so are the idiots that work for her - Fucks China right up.
• Ebay pays NO taxes in California? (This exposes Whitman and her buddies for the lying sacks of shit they really are)
• Women are dumping Mega Woman - Princess Meggy Whitman.
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• Paypal - sneak fees - sneak thieves.
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• Dim Whitman - Makes the Head Lines.... Cashed Up B4 Big Fall
• Steve Madden Sues eBay Over Fake Watch Sales
• Setup Online Store with Google Docs and Google Checkout
• Ebay "awash" with fakes
• Yay!!!!!!!!!!!!! GOOGLE shops - 5 minutes - your in business.
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• Yes shit in your customers faces- Ebay loses massive market share in UK.
• You see now - The difference between Ebay and a Butt Plug is...
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• The Ebay Tffany Fakes Fight Fires Up.
• The Big 300 Entries......... Time for a celebration!
• Net sleuth calls eBay on carpet over shill bidding - Part 2 B.
• Net sleuth calls eBay on carpet over shill bidding - Part 2 A.
• Net sleuth calls eBay on carpet over shill bidding - Part 1.
• Team Nut-Meg recycles Endorsements from Dimwits and Thieves
• Ebay makes EVEN more friends.
• Meg Whitman and Tax Avoidance
• Meg Whitman - Paypal and Political Interference.
• Has Ebay hacked YOUR computer?
• eBay faces data protection inquiry
• Ebay refusing to allow you to delete your account? Read on.
• Ebay 3rd Party Access To Your Account? Check Your Account Now!
• Meg Whitman - the Corporate Leech
• Whitman, Romney and the Granny Warriors Paypal political scandal
• Incest, Bestiality, "Porn - Porn - Porn" & Pay for it all withPaypal.
• Court Says eBay is a Criminal Enterprise
• Ebay (and Paypal) - in a nut shell.
• Back in the Gude Olde Daze of Ebay they had Square Trade - and it was a scam from the outset.
• Meg Whitman - sells child porn toys on Ebay - Part 6.
• Meg Whitman - sells child porn toys on Ebay - Part 5.
• Meg Whitman - sells child porn toys on Ebay - Part 4.
• Meg Whitman - sells child porn toys on Ebay - Part 3.
• Meg Whitman - sells child porn toys on Ebay - Part 2.
• Meg Whitman - sells child porn toys on Ebay - Part 1.
• Ebay - Tax Fraud and Swiss Bank Accounts: Part 06
• Ebay - Tax Fraud and Swiss Bank Accounts: Part 05
• Ebay - Tax Fraud and Swiss Bank Accounts: Part 04
• Ebay - Tax Fraud and Swiss Bank Accounts: Part 03
• Ebay - Tax Fraud and Swiss Bank Accounts: Part 02
• Ebay - Tax Fraud and Swiss Bank Accounts: Part 01
• Ebay sells dodgy drugs to children - Just how low can you go for a buck?
• EBay RIGGS sales....
• Ebay can fuck off and die..... Scummy freebees, and even higher fees (again)
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXXIIII - Meg Whitman scums for money and asks you to spam for her
• We get letters....
• Kneecapping Ebay.......
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXXIII - Meg Whitman gets a Maths and Reality Check
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXXII - Meg Whitman (Mrs Potato Face) is fugly.
• Ebay changes user agreement 5 times in 2 hours (wankers)
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXX - A rehash of what a thieving terd Whitman is
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXVIIIII - Mrs Charisma bores everyone shitless.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXVIIII - The PR Campaign - A typical Whitman lie.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXVIII - The PR Campaign - No intelligence - No Honesty.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXVII - How her lackies spin the shit
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXVI - Meggy gets a make over.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXV - Meggy doesn't get the point
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXIIII - Even the Chicks hate her.......
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXIII - Mega-Duck 2010
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXII - Meggy weazles out of public debate....
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXXI - Meggy Attracts Attention Like a Bare Bumhole
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXX - Meggy will fuck CA, like she did with Ebay.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXVIIII - Meggy HAS no friends.......
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXVIII - Meggies Body Language...
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXVII - Meggy is truly FUGLY Part II
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXVI - Meggy is truly FUGLY Part I
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXV - Meggy is a gutless weasle Part IIII
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXIIII - Meggy is a gutless weasle Part III
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXIII - Meggy is a gutless weasle Part II
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXII - Meggy is a gutless weasle Part I
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XXI - Mrs Charisma - Her enemies appear on Youtube
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XX - Mrs Charisma - Appears on You Tube.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XVIIII - first she says this, then she says that
• Police Template Ebay Complaint Statement....
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2L. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2K. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2J. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2I. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2H. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2G. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2G. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2F. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2E. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2D. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2C. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2B. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 2A. The Principles of Contract
• FEEBAYS new user agreement - Part 1. That is forced upon you without negotiation....
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XVIII - Former eBay chief faces skeptical tech leaders
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XVII - Dr Jay debates Meggy.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XVI - Meg REFUSES to debate.
• Ebay stops fraud - 2002 and now - pick the improvement in apathy.
• EBay Faces a Lawsuit for Identifying Real Coins as Fakes
• Antitrust Lawsuit Filed against eBay over PayPal, Payments Policies
• Ebay rigs the bidding - by automatically bidding you against no one.
• Corporate Blogs and 'Tweets' Must Keep SEC in Mind Social Media Offer Immediacy and Spontaneity to Communications but Risk Running Afoul of Regulations
• Ebay, Paypal and Australia Post.
• Google and Ebay Profiting from Sale of Illegal Goods
• Reports of eBay's New Dispute Process in Action - Yes Ebay and Paypal just rock.
• The latest Ebay / Paypal Scam - giving Paypal to schools, charaties etc., Part I.
• Ebay gets nailed for FALSE ADVERTISING - again (the bullshit and conjobs continue)
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XV - Won't Vote for Meg
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XIIII - Her picking on same sex relationships back fires.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XIII - Her successor dumps her dumb ideas.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XII - the students think she is an arsehole.
• Paypal launders Gambling Money offshore from organised crime syndicates..
• Sue Paypal.org - have a look at this site.
• I am going to pinch ONE weppage from this site - Why? Because it's excellent.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part XI - Whitman Fan Site #1.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part X - Fun Names For Whitman.
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part VIIII - Get your Neg Meg T Shirts
• Meggy goes down - in flames Part VIII - Her Credibility as the Ebay CEO....
• Meggy goes down in flames Part VII
• Meggy goes down in flames Part VI
• Meggy goes down in flames Part V. (she is a hardcore fetish pornography entrepreneur too)
• Whitman goes down in flames Part IIII
• Whitman goes down in flames Part III
• Whitman goes down in flames Part II
• Meggy goes down - in flames. (or unethical CEO = incompetent Govenor)
• Ebay even fucks around our best Journo's - and their accounts get hacked too.
• The Root of all Evil - The Nazi's of Ebay.
• eBay CEO John Donahoe at Goldman Sachs Conference
• Another stock market Analyst... Some nasty ebay questions.
• For Whom the Bell Tolls - Ebay Investor Day Commeth.
• Alibaba/Taobao kicks Ebays arse in China - plans to kick Ebays arse on home turf.
• Congress nails Ebay for permitting and profiteering from fraud.
• Citi Bank - Ebay Investors Meeting Questions.
• Meg Whitman is a BORE, and a tiresome old one at that - the Delegates snooze during her speech.
• Heavily Vaselined Ex-eBay CEO Running for California Governor
• Meg Whitman - Running for California Gov - in her own words. Part I.
• Ebay Australia - Pulls my dick - Gets punched in the nose.
• The Fat Bastard Griff - Dog and Pony Show.
• Whitman and her buddies even scam the shareholders.....
• Ebay owns 118 companies - Fooey.
• Haaaa Haaaaaaaa Ebay just gets Dumber and Dumber...... Flashing Adds in listings.
• The Competition to Ebay - are now listing Millions of Unique Items
• The Competition just gets hotter - and Ebay gets sad and worse.
• Haaa haa ha - Ebay profit slumps 30%+, shares under $10 - CEO full of shit.
• eBay Alternatives News Roundup: New Features and Contests
• eBay Alternatives Pick up Steam in 2008 Thanks to Google
• The Tide has Gone OUT - on Ebay.
• The Ebay Alternatives ARE picking up Steam - and lots of it..
• China - Vision sinks boots into Ebay (Yessssssssss!)
• China-Vision - direct dropshipping to over 50 Alternatives to Ebay
• Ten different Analysts sitting on a fence - and the feedback.
• The Accountants and Stock Brokers said: Part 2.
• And the Accountants and Stock Brokers said: Part 1.
• How Meggy "Dim-Whit-man" lost her grab for other peoples domain names.
• A Fun Poem......
• Meggie Whitman runs for California Govenor..... (vomits up anus)
• Schools Out - For Ever - Ebay Univeristy - Crashes and Burns
• An almost final thought for 2008.
• The Crystal Ball - Ebay in 2009 - We Saw it First (Our Crystal Ball is better than theirs)
• Is the crash of Ebay a share buyback - resell scam?
• Almost ONE year ago - today..... Ebay - was severely shit then and things got worse.
• Feedback in the forums.
• The con-artists who run Ebay are now pushing for protection from retail price fixing?
• More insight into Paypals negligence.
• Paypal Support - now with longer hours (= more bullshit, more hours)
• Lots of people want to join a class action against Ebay - make that class actions..
• Give the little guys a go! New Small Local Auction Site
• Ebay - Best place to buy (mostly dead) stolen rare native wildlife
• People IN Ebay say "Donna-Hoe - Your a Tool".
• Cases AGAINST Paypal in the US Federal Court
• Cases AGAINST Ebay in the US Federal Court
• 2008: The Year eBay Lost Its Mojo
• Just WHO does Ebay share your personal information with? "Fuck Me!!!"
• Ecommerce Guide - Our Picks for Top eBay Alternatives for 2008
• Small Business Computing - Ebay Alternative Awards
• The Head of Ebay Australia Quits - Leaves Legacy of Dishonesty and Destruction.
• Ebay deletes objectors posts - Image Management = Crooked Company
• This guy is an astute writer - And the feed back? It's savage.
• The Growing Frustration of eBay Sellers
• eBay Buyer Incentives Are Not a Good Bargain
• eBay's Disruptive Innovations Come Full Circle - bites stupid CEO on his own arse
• eBay closes European national offices
• Ebay - Anti-Competative behaviour - Against Sellers, Buyers - Part FOUR
• Ebay - Anti-Competative behaviour - Against Sellers, Buyers - Part THREE
• Ebay - Anti-Competative behaviour - Against Sellers, Buyers - Part TWO
• Ebay - Anti-Competative behaviour - Against Sellers, Buyers - Part ONE.
• Ebid wins Webuser Award - Best Alternative to Ebay Site.
• Public confidence in Ebay = a big fat "0".
• Meg Whitman loses bid for governor domain names
• Ebay promotes FRAUD by selling it.
• L'Oreal can wax my pubes anyday - sues Ebay for being crooked wankers
• Ebay Sales attract hackers like Flies to Shit.
• Ebay Security? Ebay Customer Service? What Security - What Service?
• Ebay Poo-litics.
• Ebay / Paypal mass renegs on "buyer protection".
• Recent Ebay Glitches..... This is really BAD.
• Dr Jay goes Mental....
• PooPal Advertising
• Playing the Paypal Circle Jerk.
• EBay and Paypal sumbags our Aboriginals.
• Ebay managment are not on the ball.....
• Paypal's NOT working.... again.
• Dear Dr. Jay
• After the Collapse and Crash of Ebay
• Don from Mr Fixit dot Com Speaks.
• Ebay is in the shit. Big time. - In simple terms;
• The NASTY side of Ebay management....
• Donna The Ho' - Eats Crow.
• Ebays stocks now under $12...... Ebay founder and ex Ebay CEO's give shares = tax wrought?
• Ebay page views drop by more than 30%.... (glug, glug, glug - gasp...)
• More serious competition to Scambay - err I mean Ebay.
• He'd rather fuck a coconut?
• Meggy Whitless - The Golden Shower Queen of Pee-Bay
• Ebay scams the sellers...
• Ebays policies against bid sniping - One company places up to 300 snipe bids a second.
• Ebay Loves Shill Bidders - Why? Because Ebay makes more. That's why.
• This is just soooooooo fucking typically Ebay:
• Hows this for an Ebay Suspension?
• How Much Money EBay Stole From Me In The Last Week!
• Meg Whitman wants everyone else's "Meg Whitman" domain names
• Ebay takes over "Bill Me Later Inc" - borrows $1 billion.
• The Professional eBay Sellers Alliance - statement:: "Ebay is completely fucked"
• Meggy Whitman Gets a Hot Date!!!! (Not)
• The Attorneys General - Where, Who and How to SHAFT Ebay in the USA.
• Paypal took a survey.....
• EBAY PAYPAL and the IRS? part II - the article's great - the comments are interesting.
• EBAY - PAYPAL - IRS? Your account goes up shit creek.
• Ebay Founder becomes Champion of Social Justice?
• PayPal accounts compromised over 16 months; No response from eBay
• John McCain - Grew a brain - Thinks Witman founded Ebay.
• * * * * * * * Awards for the Best Fuck Ebay Videos
• Ebay shits in Paul Numans face.
• Ebay enters the Twilight Zone (Doo Doo Doo Doo, Doo Doo Doo Doo)
• eBay's Death By a Thousand Fee Cuts
• How the management of Ebay scams you with their "government" type bullshit.
• Ebay - How it really is.
• Dirty Deals Done Dirt Cheap - Ebay shafts sellers "Big Time".
• Ebays Credit takes a nose dive - stumbling from broken nose to kick in nuts.
• International Anti Counterfeiting Coalition Vs. Ebay - Nasty Ebay.
• 10 Top Frustrations of Ebay users - from another site:
• MARCH, 2008 “EBAY CHICAGO” COMPLIMENTARY PIZZA
• Do you know about the law of exponentiality?
• Oh Meg Whitman - we love you !!!
• Ebay Shares now $13, another 1000 employees out..
• Bid Sniping = Ebay Sleazeware.
• What Ebay fucked up in Australia - they are spreading to the rest of the world.
• "Ebay Haters" has a Face Book Site::: Whooooo Whoooooo
• Ebay sinks even lower - and lower and lower
• Ebay Sellers Fee's rise by 300%
• The Consumer, The Courts vs. Ebay - A trip down Memory Lane.
• The I Hate Ebay Support Group - LOL - Brilliant
• And before Paypal - there was SquareTtrade - slippery wording, sly ciontracts..
• Consumer Alert: PayPal's Problems
• Ebay tried to force everyone to pay, by Paypal only, back in 2005
• Amazon.com - New Payment System........................... ( = no paypal)
• 2500 Lost Heaps on Ebay Australia.....- Ebays Responses?
• Yeahhh Ebay is a Trafficker of Pirated Software and Cheap FAKES.
• This is an example of how Ebay pulls peoples "no paypal" listings:
• There are ONLY 15 people working in Paypal in Australia!
• eBay rebels take PayPal issue to the Reserve Bank of Australia
• From the eBay chat board.....
• Kicking the Ebay Bug.
• Paypal and the BIG LIE.
• A temporary change of mind......
• I think I might sign off on this blog.
• eBay still 'forcing' sellers to use PayPal
• Slimebay and the ACCC......
• Ebay releases statement - "We ARE filing for bankruptcy".
• Is Ebay about to file for bankruptcy?
• Ebay vs. the ACCC - and ALL of the Ebay Haters - & their 700+ submissions.
• Just how many policies does Ebay / Paypal have?
• Paypals "Product Disclosure Statement" ( = sign your rights away)
• 28 US Attorneys General vs. Paypal and Ebay
• The State of Play - of Ebay in Australia - Today Tonight Stats.
• ebay fee hike sparks seller rebellion 3,165 Comments
• Alistair McGibbon...... Life on Civvy Street - and the General Public.
• EBay rivals circle vulnerable auctions kingpin
• The Courier Mail...
• The BIG LIE....
• Ebay's Town Hall Meeting. (ahem)
• Fuck Ebay --------- Yay the reserve bank..... (for once) Everyone Hates Ebay's Management.
• Points to consider when opposing Ebays Application for Exclusive trading
• Whooaaa Ebay aint Freindly. Letter to the ACCC - Power Sellers United.
• Help lube the ACCC's digit as it probes deeper into the shit - send your submissions to the ACCC
• The ACCC is now probing the Anus of Ebay.
• He hates Ebay and Pay Pal too - www.screw-paypal.com - Aussie's fight back:
• Ebay now forces all sellers to ONLY use paypal.
• Ebay Australia? Your kidding right.....
• Jason goes Gunning for PayPal
• Ebay Customer Service Solutions by Jason
• An interesting report by Deucha Bank on Ebay -
• Ebay - Sellers are sinking the boots into them - shares are dropping...
• Get your own printable FuckEbay Award..... FREE - for you and your friends!!
• Hmm Some Great Anti-PayPal sites (Anti-Ebay)
• Now a Word about PayPal - from Our Friends - Paypalwarning.com
• How Ebay staff lie, scheme and bullshit people...
• You wanna read up on all the bullshit the fucking clowns in ebay put people through?
• Google Checkout... Fuck Ebay and it's Pay Pal. (Pay Pull?)
• Ebay management bullshits and blames the sellers and buyers for it's fuckups and incompetence.
• Ebay Shares have dropped in value more than 50%
• The people who run Ebay are just soooo fucking deceiful and crooked... and full of shit.
• Uhh more complaints about BAD Ebay Customer Service. What can I say?
• Ebay fucking your round with your sellers Neg Feedback?
• Hmmm Fuck Him - the Scammer Seller.
• Fuck Ebay - Kafka - The Trial (a prehistorical parody of Ebay?)
• I still hate Ebay.
• Fuck Ebay - here are some 80 + alternatives to Ebay...:)
• Bad Ebay #7 - this is pretty typical BAD EBAY / PAYPAL service / scamming.
• Bad Ebay #6 - Ebay and Paypal support Fraud.
• Bad Ebay #5... peeps are SUING EBAY (Yay!!!!)
• Bad Ebay #4. - The peoples Hate Ebay sites.
• Bad Ebay #3. Oooooooo they is bad.
• Bad Ebay #2.. they piss more people off than you can imagine.
• Bad Ebay #1.
• I hate Ebay... I have had a gutful of their shit and I have had enough

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