Using Paypal for eBay Purchases

Using Paypal for eBay Purchases

by: Terry Gibbs

Paypal is the preferred payment choice for many buyers because Paypal allows buyers to pay instantly for eBay purchases. In this article, we will review using Paypal on eBay from the buyerกs point of view.

Since eBay purchased Paypal, it has become even easier for buyers and sellers to complete auction sales. Buyers like Paypal because they can quickly and easily pay online. In fact, some bidders will only bid on items they can pay for with Paypal.

One thing that confuses buyers is some sellers accept Paypal payments through credit cards, while others only accept transfers. You see, with Paypal a buyer can fund the transaction in three ways. This can confuse buyers, and cause problems.

Hereกs the three ways to fund a Paypal transaction:

1. Transfer from a bank account tied to the userกs Paypal account.

2. Transfer from a Paypal balance.

3. Payment from a Credit Card.

The first two options cost Paypal nothing in processing fees. Credit cards cost about 2 percent to process, and Paypal passes this cost on to merchants. Some eBay sellers do not want to pay this fee for service, so they only accept payments by transfer. This confuses buyers who win auctions and assume a credit card transaction is fine.

Paypal wants users to transfer funds, and not use their credit cards. Not only is this cheaper for Paypal, but there is no risk of a chargeback.

A chargeback is when a buyer reverses the charge on a credit card by contacting his bank. Most, maybe all, banks will reverse a credit card charge with little or no investigation if the card holder contests the charge. The money is taken right out of the merchantกs bank account Paypal in this case.

Paypal makes it difficult to use a credit card to send money through Paypal. This is done making the credit card payment option difficult to find, and warning users about the กriskก because you cannot buy Paypalกs insurance.

With a credit card purchase, you do not need Paypalกs insurance. Your bank will reverse the charge free if the seller scams you.

One other way Paypal makes it hard for users to instantly send money with a credit card is by limiting the total amount you can charge.

The first time I tried to use Paypal to pay for an eBay auction, I was unable to use my credit card because the amount was above the limit. That was a $700 item. I think the single item limit is $500, but could not find confirmation of this. The lifetime limit, or total amount you can send all eBay sellers with a credit card is $2,000.

If you wish to pay for an item with a credit card through Paypal you should confirm the seller takes card transactions. This can be done reviewing the auction and looking for the credit card logos adjacent to the Paypal logo in the payment methods screen.

Whenever you pay for an eBay auction through Paypal, you should check the sellerกs Paypal status. Do not send large amounts to unverified users, and watch that the userกs address matches the auction details.

Paypal is an easy way to pay for your eBay purchases.

About The Author

Terry Gibbs is a collector/dealer of old toys and trains, and teaches others how to buy and sell antiques and collectibles. Gibbs is the author of two best selling eBay books ‘the Auction Revolution,ก and ‘the Complete Guide To eBay Consignment Sales.ก He has also written numerous other books about buying and selling antiques and collectibles. Learn more at his website: http://www.news.iwantcollectibles.com.

This article was posted on March 22

by Terry Gibbs

You Are Wasting You Adword Money

You Are Wasting You Adword Money

by: Iszuddin Ismail aka Kidino

Now this is a tip if you are using any kind of PPC (Adwords, Overture) to promote any product offered via ClickBank or any affiliate program that uses PayPal for payment processing.

If you don’t know this already, ClickBank and Paypal does not accept payment from everybody.

They only accept payments from certain countries. And they can do that by identifying the IP address of the buyer.

For example, me, living in Malaysia, I cannot buy anything that is offered through ClickBank. I hate it!

So the tip is this. Whenever you are promoting anything from ClickBank, use geographical targeting to reduce costs. Just select the countries that can buy the the product.

For example, if you are promoting the Super Affiliate Handbook (by Rosalind Gardner) with Adwords, don’t include Malaysia in the regional targeting.

If I happens to come by your ad on Google, and I think that itกs interesting, I click on it that just costs you $0.20 (maybe). And when I get there, however interested I am with the product, I can’t buy it.

And maybe I could contact the merchant. And the merchant arranged an alternative payment via StormPay or MoneyBooker. But that will not be tracked with ClickBank … you just did favour for your merchant. Well … so generous of you.

$0.20 just went down the toilet. And 50% commission lost.

You can avoid that loss if you had not selected กAll Countriesก in your geographical targeting.

So what I am suggesting is for you to only show your ad to these few countries using the geographical targeting. Of course selecting the countries will takes time. But you could save a lot this way.

To make it easier for you, I have a list of countries that ClickBank do accept payments from. And thereกs another list for Paypal as well.

ClickBank

Andorra

Anguilla

Antigua & Barbuda

Aruba

Ascension Is

Australia

Austria

Bahamas

Barbados

Belgium

Belize

Bermuda

Bolivia

Bosnia & Herzegovina

Botswana

Bouvet Is

Brazil

Canada

Canada

Cayman Is

Chile

China

Colombia

Costa Rica

Cyprus

Czech Rep

Denmark

Dominica

Dominican Rep

Ecuador

El Salvador

Equatorial Guinea

Estonia

Falkland Is

Faroe Is

Fiji

Finland

France

Germany

Gibraltar

Great Britain

Great Britain

Greece

Greenland

Grenada

Guadeloupe

Guatemala

Honduras

Hong Kong

Hungary

Iceland

India

Ireland

Isle Of Man

Italy

Jamaica

Japan

Kenya

Kiribati

Korea (South)

Kuwait

Latvia

Liechtenstein

Lithuania

Luxembourg

Maldives

Malta

Martinique

Mauritius

Mexico

Monaco

Montserrat

Namibia

Nauru

Nepal

Netherlands

Netherlands Antilles

New Caledonia

New Zealand

Nicaragua

Niue Is

Norfolk Is

Northern Ireland

Norway

Palau

Panama

Papua New Guinea

Paraguay

Peru

Pitcairn Is

Poland

Portugal

Reunion Is

San Marino

Sao Tome & Principe

Seychelles

Singapore

Slovak Rep

Slovenia

Solomon Is

South Africa

Spain

Sri Lanka

St Helena

St Kitts & Nevis

St Lucia

St Pierre & Miquelon

St Vincent & Grenadines

Svalbard & Jan Mayen Is

Sweden

Switzerland

Taiwan

Thailand

Togo

Tokelau

Tonga

Trinidad & Tobago

Turks & Caicos Is

Tuvalu

United Kingdom (Gb)

United States

Uruguay

Vanuatu

Venezuela

Virgin Is (Gb)

Wallis & Futuna Is

PayPal

Anguilla

Argentina

Australia

Austria

Belgium

Brazil

Canada

Chile

China

Costa Rica

Denmark

Dominican Republic

Ecuador

Finland

France

Germany

Greece

Hong Kong

Iceland

India

Ireland

Israel

Italy

Jamaica

Japan

Luxembourg

Malaysia

Mexico

Monaco

Netherlands

New Zealand

Norway

Portugal

Singapore

South Korea

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

Taiwan

Thailand

Turkey

United Kingdom

United States

Uruguay

Venezuela

About The Author

Iszuddin Ismail is the กWeb Marketing Techieก at MoneyClicking. He publishes the MoneyClicking Newsletter where he shares tips and strategies to website building for internet marketing. Go over and subscribe to MoneyClicking Newsletter and receive a 50page FREE EBOOK ContentSite for Affiliate Income.

http://www.moneyclicking.net

This article was posted on September 19, 2004

by Iszuddin Ismail aka Kidino

Taking Paypal on eBay

Taking Paypal on eBay

by: Terry Gibbs

Accepting Paypal as a payment method might increase your selling prices and your profits. This depends on what you are selling. I sell collectibles to collectors. My clients are like junkies. They will buy regardless of the payment options, so not offering Paypal won’t make much difference in the final selling prices.

If you sell items with high competition, accepting Paypal will make your auctions more attractive. This also holds true for impulse buys. Plus, you can get paid instantly through Paypal.

Hereกs a few suggestions for increasing your profits by accepting Paypal:

1. Select accept Paypal in the auction listing process to get the Paypal logo into your auction. You can put in the auction description that you accept Paypal, but unless you use the Paypal logo some buyers will miss this Payment choice. Many buyers look specifically for the logo and expect to find it in certain areas of the auction listing.

2. If you only accept bank account transfers, and do not accept credit card payments through paypal be sure to mention this in your auction description and the payment types area. Even after you mention this, you will get credit card payments from some Paypal users. This causes confusion with buyers.

3. One problem that may come up is your shipping schedule. I ship once a week. Some eBay buyers feel that I should drop everything and go to the post office as soon as they send me money through Paypal. This used to cause problems.

Now when a buyer sends me money, I quickly email him and tell him when to expect his item. Because I ship on Thursday or Friday, I can tell them their item will be delivered by the next Tuesday, if not earlier. Instead of telling the buyer I will ship the item on Friday, I tell them to expect it on Monday. This changes the buyerกs focus from when I will ship to when they will get the item.

One last thing before I finish up. I recommend eBay sellers use guarantees. If you take a credit card through Paypal, and later refund the buyerกs money, you will be out the Paypal fees if the refund is done more than 30 days after the initial transaction. You need to require your buyer to return the item quickly.

About The Author

Terry Gibbs is a collector/dealer of old toys and trains, and teaches others how to buy and sell antiques and collectibles. Gibbs is the author of two best selling eBay books ‘the Auction Revolution,ก and ‘the Complete Guide To eBay Consignment Sales.ก He has also written numerous other books about buying and selling antiques and collectibles. Learn more at his website: http://www.news.iwantcollectibles.com.

This article was posted on March 22

by Terry Gibbs

Drop Ship To Family Health

Drop Ship To Family Health

by: David Maddern

Everyone knows that bringing up children is expensive. It is also well known that a lot of business is conducted over the internet.

Parents often get onto the net in the evening, and there is now heaps of scope to join in this commerce.

In fact it may well be a way to excite teenagers to an exciting family dynamic.

Let me explain.

Drop shipping is a term that applies to a supplier having agents who obtain orders for the supplier to fulfil.

As an example I might set up an eBay auction page say binoculars for starting price $1.

I set my reserve at wholesale + $2 (unresearched amount to cover Bay fee and Paypal fees)

As an auction comes to its time, perhaps the final price is 60% higher than the wholesale.

I get the funds from the buyers, which is price +shipping and send the order with details to the supplier.

The supplier delivers the binoculars and bills me for the wholesale + shipping.

I send off the money to the supplier.

Note all my communications with the supplier are by email and money transfer through Paypal transactions over the net.

The result is here 60% or the wholesale figure times the number of buyers, and all I have outlayed a few dollars for eBay and deducted Paypal fees. No big out of pocket expenses at all.

Now that is a model. There is far,far more than binoculars and I can give you links to over 700,000 products, over two wholesalers.

The excitement that a teenager (or anyone else)could feel is in:

skills in selection of goods to sell,

skills in constructing eBay sites,

watching the bid development,

the reproducibility with extra products,

the profit and what options that gives,

sharing the knowledge with others.

There is incidental training in aspects of financial dealings,and setting up a wall chart could be a valuable tool for training in organization.

The areas of potential risk are (you may be able to see more):

losing passwords and web addresses

failure to set a reserve figure

spending the sale price without provision for wholesale payments,

no provision for tax put away for tax time,

delay in payment, incurring a bad reputation on eBay

lack of organization with multiple auctions

(overtrading is not a problem as you don’t buy the goods in the first place.)

These are easily preventable, and can lead to valuable structural lessons.

There is an eBook on eBay that you can download free from http://www.healthinsuranceplus.biz/ebayreports.zip (344Kb) fees that eBay charge are at http://pages.ebay.com/help/sell/fees.html

A Yahoo store is also a possibility but costs,while traffic to it will happen.

Credit card net processors

Paypal (an eBay company) is well received, signup free here http://Pay_pal.Opportunity.com

Clickbank http://Click_bank.Opportunity.com

Drop ship merchants are

FreeStoreClub.com http://www.soy.freestoreclub.com

You can join this one for free, or pay $10 or$50 per month to lock in your place in a net work, and as people join under you, perhaps at your recommendation, you get payments.

Certainly the free option will be adequate for drop shipping.

Worldwide Brands is an operation that covers 120 makers and 700,000 products. http://Drop_ship.Opportunity.com

You will have to download their Directory which has a cost associated but the scope here is enormous.

So those are the tools from which acorns can produce oak trees. Start small and who knows where you will go.

In fact, since there is no loss if a reserve is set, and there is no outlay, I can’t see why you can’t cover all the walls with wall charts, but you would be the one doing it, not me!

If you build your own web page and wish to tune it for the search engines be aware that is a longer term option, even if you are destined for top spot, expect up to 6 weeks.

Look at my page which describes using free trials to optimize at

http://free_trial.opportunity.com

Free to distribute by any media as long as links are maintained

About The Author

David Maddern in into web marketing and promotes FreeStoreClub,MasteryTV new empowering internet TV that shows home topics like teenesteem and relationships, as well as power negotiation and other business topics at

http://www.masterytv.net/logon, and CASHculture which has free webspace for members at

http://www.cashculture.com/restio

His major page is http://www.restio.referralware.com

This article was posted on March 08, 2004

by David Maddern

ANTIS*P^A#M: Protecting Your Web Siteกs Email Add

ANTIS*P^A#M: Protecting Your Web Siteกs Email Address(es)

by: Maria Marsala

Did you know that there are software programs that view web sites and steal email addresses? Itกs called กharvestingก because they’re harvesting your email address from your site. This may be one of the reasons your web site email address is receiving more s*p^a#m than wanted email.

When I first started teaching web design classes, I strongly suggested that students place their email address on each page it makes your site a bit more ‘trustable.ก But it turns out this is just leaving you wide open to harvesting.

So now, what I suggest are links on each page directed to a single contact information page, where your email address is encrypted. If the s*p^a#mmers end up figuring out the encryption, itกs still easier for you to change one page worth of information vs. many pages of information.

Encrypting your email address makes the gathering process a little more difficult while it provides that legitimate email get through to you.

If you find that one encryption program has stopped working, see if the provider updated the code you were using (many provide regular updates) or change to another service.

Do you have PayPal payment or shopping cart links on your site? Up until about a month ago, the old PayPal coding included your email address. If you haven’t upgraded recently, update your PayPal links to include the encrypted code they provide, too. Changing that code stopped quite a bit of unwanted email from reaching me.

Here are some helpful encryption program resources:

http://automaticlabs.com/products/enkoderform/

http://www.robertgraham.com/tools/mailtoencoder.html

http://natata.hn3.net/antispam_encoder.htm

http://www.tucows.com/preview/266685.html

http://innerpeace.org/escrambler.shtml

http://www.wbwip.com/wbw/emailencoder.html

http://w2.syronex.com/jmr/safemailto/

Encryption programs A VERY good thing to use on your web site to reduce unwanted email.

About The Author

Elevating Your Business. Since 1998, Maria Marsala, a former Wall Street Trader, has worked more than 1000 women (and men) who own service business to increase their profits, save time, and live rich, fulfilling lives. Visit www.ElevatingYourBusiness.com to request your 2 business reports and join our business building newsletter or forum.

This article was posted on April 09

by Maria Marsala

The Clickbank Crash of 2003: Lessons Learned

The Clickbank Crash of 2003: Lessons Learned

by: Timothy Kerber

I had a rude awakening recently. I checked the days worth of sales from one of my sites and there were none. This had never happened before and of course I was anxious to find out what was wrong.

I quickly found out that the credit card processor Clickbank was under a hacker attack. Their service was effectively paralyzed by computers around the world flooding Clickbanks computers with bogus requests for information.

They weren’t the only web site being attacked. Similar attacks have happened against Yahoo and CNN in the past.

This is the first one that effected me directly… right in the wallet.

Time For Emergency Action

Nobody knew how long Clickbank would be down.

I wasn’t going to wait around to find out! I had to take emergency measures to cope with it.

I was not only losing sales that couldn’t be placed, I was also losing money on online advertising. Pay per click accounts were sending people to my site which they couldn’t order from.

The first thing I did was pause my pay per click accounts until I got things under control. This saved me from wasting money on useless advertising.

Alternate Payment Choice

I needed another credit card processor to handle my sales and quick! I was lucky that I already had a Paypal account in place.

I quickly created Paypal payment links so that customers could pay for my products. It was a matter of creating the links correctly and changing the webpages to handle the paypal transactions.

I don’t normally use Paypal because Clickbankกs affiliate program is exceptional. In this case, I did not have much choice and it was easy for me to start accepting money again.

Once Paypal was up and running, I reactivated my pay per click campaigns. I was happily rewarded within the hour with a sale… My first in a day.

Thankfully Clickbank was back on its feet after about 3 days or so. I then switched things back to normal.

Handling My Affiliates

By using Paypal instead of Clickbank, I was denying my affiliates commissions on traffic they had sent me during this incident. I wanted to make it up to them as I didn’t think it was fair to them.

I did this by averaging out how much commission they had earned in the 30 days prior to the incident. I divided that total amount by 30 to come up with an average amount per day they had earned. I then gave them 3 days worth of this commission with an explaination of what happened. Ironically, I sent them their commissions through Paypal so they got them instantly.

I received excellent feedback from appreciative affiliates. Some of them stated that my commissions were the only money they made during the time that Clickbank was down.

How You Can Prepare Ahead Of Time

There is no guarantee that Clickbank or any other payment processor won’t be attacked by hackers again. It is extremely difficult to defend against.

It would be smart getting a backup plan in place just in case.

Hereกs a good back up plan:

Get a paypal account in place now in case you need it

Create your alternate order pages with the Paypal links and keep them ready กjust in caseก

In the event something does happen, keep good communication going with your affiliates. They will appreciate it and will likely reward you with more loyal sales in the future for you

I am sure a lot of lessons were learned during this time. I still love Clickbank, but now I have the experience of having a backup plan I can quickly put into place should anything like this happen again. You may want to prepare ahead of time also.

About The Author

Article by Tim Kerber from the Small Business Web Site. Learn proven secrets to make your web site a profitable success. Tips, tutorials, videos, interviews and more. Click here now http://www.SmallBusinessWebSite.com

This article was posted on September 09, 2003

by Timothy Kerber

Cyber Crooks Go กPhishingก

Cyber Crooks Go กPhishingก

by: Jim Edwards

กPhishing,ก the latest craze among online evildoers, has nothing to do with sitting at the end of a dock on a sunny afternoon dangling a worm to entice hungry catfish.
But, if you take their bait, this new breed of online con artist will hook you, reel you in, and take you for every dollar you have… or worse.
กPhishingก describes a combination of techniques used by cyber crooks to bait people into giving up sensitive personal data such as credit card numbers, social security numbers, bank account numbers, dates of birth and more.
Their techniques work so well that, according to FraudWatchInternational.com, กphishingก rates as the fastest growing scam on the Internet.
Hereกs the basic pattern for a กphishingก scam…
You receive a very official email that appears to originate from a legitimate source, such as a bank, eBay, PayPal, a major retailer, or some other well known entity.
In the email it tells you that something bad is about to happen unless you act quickly.
Typically it tells you that your account is about to get closed, that someone appears to have stolen your identity, or even that someone opened a fraudulent account using your name.
In order to help straighten everything out, you need to click a link in the email and provide some basic account information so they can verify your identity and then give you additional details so you can help get everything cleared up.
Once you give up your information… itกs all over but the crying!
After getting your information, these cyberbandits can empty your bank accounts, deplete your PayPal accounts, run up your credit card balances, open new credit accounts, assume your identity and much worse.
An especially disturbing new variation of this scam specifically targets online business owners and affiliate marketers.
In this con, the scammerกs email informs you that theyกve just sent $1,219.43 (or a similar big but believable amount) in affiliate commissions to you via PayPal.
They need you to log into your PayPal account to verify receipt of the money and then email them back to confirm you got it.
Since you’re so excited at the possibility of an unexpected pay day, you click the link to go to PayPal, log in, and BANG! They have your PayPal login information and can empty your account.
This new กphishingก style scam works extremely well for 2 basic reasons.
First, by exploiting your sense of urgency created by fear or greed, crooks get you to click the link and give them your information without thinking.
Second, the scammers use a variety of cloaking and spoofing techniques to make their emails and websites appear totally legitimate, making it extremely hard to spot a fake website, especially when theyกve first whipped you into an emotional frenzy.
The good news, however, is that you can protect yourself relatively easily against this type of cybercrime with basic software and common sense.
Most of these scams get delivered to you via Spam (unsolicited email), so a good spam blocker will cut down on many of them even making it to your inbox.
If you receive an email that looks legitimate and you want to respond, Stop Wait Think!
Verify all phone numbers with a physical phone book or online phone directory like www.Verizon.com or www.ATT.com/directory/ before calling.
Look for spelling and grammatical errors that make it look like someone who doesn’t speak English or your native language very well wrote it.
Never click the link provided in the email, but go directly to the website by typing in the main address of the site yourself (example: www.paypal.com or www.ebay.com).
Forward the email to the main email address of the website (example: [email protected]) or call the customer service number on the main website you typed in yourself and ask if it is in fact legitimate.
Above all remember this:
Your bank, credit card company, PayPal, eBay and anyone else you deal with online already knows your account number, username, password or any other account specific information.
They don’t need to email you for ANY reason to ask you to confirm your information so NEVER respond to email requests for your account or personal details.

About The Author

Jim Edwards is a syndicated newspaper columnist and the coauthor of an amazing new ebook that will teach you how to use fre articles to quickly drive thousands of targeted visitors to your website or affiliate links…
Need MORE TRAFFIC to your website or affiliate links? ‘turn Words Into Trafficก reveals the secrets for driving Thousands of NEW visitors to your website or affiliate links… without spending a dime on advertising! Click Here> http://www.TurnWordsIntoTraffic.com

This article was posted on June 08, 2004

by Jim Edwards

26 Tips on How to be Safe in Your eBay Selling and

26 Tips on How to be Safe in Your eBay Selling and Buying

by: Brian McGregor

The irony of eBay is that as it grows to be ever more successful, it draws the unsavoury element of the internet towards it. Iกm talking about people who make it their business to attempt to defraud you and I in our eBay and PayPal transactions.

Of course, not all dodgy dealings on eBay are fraudulent. Some are just mischievous. Others are by chancers, who perhaps reckon their victims won’t be bothered to pursue them.

Whoever causes it, itกs left to the targeted buyer or seller to try and sort out the problem. All that we as users can do is to be extremely vigilant and cautious in all our eBay and PayPal activities.

Here is a list of practical steps, in no particular order, which buyers and sellers can take to help avoid becoming the next victim.

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 กsellingก, some fraudsters use a stock photograph of the item. And they will probably use the manufacturerกs 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 กwinnerก 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? Iกll 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 offeBay

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 eBayกs 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 sellerกs 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 sellerกs 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 sellerกs 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 กAsk seller a questionก link. This could be an account hijacker trying to prevent buyers from กAsking the seller a questionก. They want to stop this from happening because such questions could be routed to the real account owner.

k) กeBay can vouch for meก 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 sellerกs location as shown in eBay, and then see if it is one of PayPalกs 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 3060 days on both eBay and PayPal.

n) Escrow

If your seller asks you to use escrow, and proposes an escrow company theyกve 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, youกll be reading the feedback of the original account owner, not the person with whom youกre 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, PayPalกs 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. Itกs 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, uptodate 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 กpartnerก who makes bids on the sellerกs 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. Hereกs how to check to see if shill bidding is a feature of a particular seller. First, look at the sellerกs 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 sellerกs auctions.

t) Keep your transaction information

Keep your own record of the transaction when youกre buying. Don’t just rely on eBay. You want a record of the sellerกs identification, the item description, emails sent and received, plus the time, date and price of your bid.

u) กI noticed your bid….ก

Never deal with anyone who contacts you after seeing your bid on another auction. They will say something like, กI 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.ก If you bite, theyกll probably take you down the fake escrow route. Also, if you entertain this proposition, youกre 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 theyกve changed their ID in the last 30 days. Few legitimate people change their eBay ID. When was the last time you changed yours? Thereกs a 1% chance that an ID change is genuine, but 99% that it is fraudulent. Why take the risk?

w) Changed email address midstream

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 cooperation. 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 กsecond chanceก. This time the กAsk the seller a questionก 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.

Thatกs 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.

About The Author

Brian McGregor specializes in showing website owners how to make more money from their sites by applying inventive and original use of eBay. For a free copy of ‘The eBay Traffic Funnel’ which shows you how to use the power of eBay to make more money with your website, visit http://www.moreauctionsales.com/websites/

[email protected]

This article was posted on January 26, 2005

by Brian McGregor