So long-time traders no longer are allowed to trade over $250 unless they give you their credit card information?
I'm not cool with this.
I'm not cool with this.
Sleet wrote:So long-time traders no longer are allowed to trade over $250 unless they give you their credit card information?
I'm not cool with this.
wonderdog79 wrote:ok I am going to comment based on what I am reading as I read it so if it get jumbled, I apologize.
forth @Zyron, I personally have 2 accounts. I manage them for different purposes and also (before premium) traded to myself to move cards from one account to the other. I also have noted on my profiles that the other account exists. If someone was to try to do some shady things by "trading" between accounts they created, that is of course a bad thing. I personally check the references for anyone under 30 confirmed trades to see who they have been trading with to ensure nothing shady is going on. I also check the "member since" to see if the shady things mentioned above could be happening.
ninth @sidewayzracer/Amurphcs, buyer feedback is a decent idea. ebay does it and it shows that you are active on the site like Amurphcs states and not some inactive scammer. perhaps not even feedback but just a tally of how many purchases you have made through the site.
Zyron wrote:wonderdog79 wrote:ok I am going to comment based on what I am reading as I read it so if it get jumbled, I apologize....
...
ninth @sidewayzracer/Amurphcs, buyer feedback is a decent idea. ebay does it and it shows that you are active on the site like Amurphcs states and not some inactive scammer. perhaps not even feedback but just a tally of how many purchases you have made through the site.
...
Also, Ebay removed negative and neutral feedback for buyers, you can only leave positive feedback. They did this because of the aforementioned reasons here, sellers would withhold feedback until a buyer left it then use it as a weapon if the buyer had a legitimate complaint. For instance, a seller once sold me something not even close to what they advertised. I paid return shipping on the item, so I was out a few bucks, and I left neutral feedback, not even negative. The seller was so upset that he shorted me and made me pay return shipping that he left me bad feedback even though he sold an item that wasn't what he stated. It's hard to have a system where buyer feedback is honest since it is basically another tool for bad sellers to use to pressure buyers into giving fake positive feedback instead of honest feedback.
Zyron wrote:wonderdog79 wrote:ok I am going to comment based on what I am reading as I read it so if it get jumbled, I apologize.
forth @Zyron, I personally have 2 accounts. I manage them for different purposes and also (before premium) traded to myself to move cards from one account to the other. I also have noted on my profiles that the other account exists. If someone was to try to do some shady things by "trading" between accounts they created, that is of course a bad thing. I personally check the references for anyone under 30 confirmed trades to see who they have been trading with to ensure nothing shady is going on. I also check the "member since" to see if the shady things mentioned above could be happening.
ninth @sidewayzracer/Amurphcs, buyer feedback is a decent idea. ebay does it and it shows that you are active on the site like Amurphcs states and not some inactive scammer. perhaps not even feedback but just a tally of how many purchases you have made through the site.
Also, Ebay removed negative and neutral feedback for buyers, you can only leave positive feedback. They did this because of the aforementioned reasons here, sellers would withhold feedback until a buyer left it then use it as a weapon if the buyer had a legitimate complaint. For instance, a seller once sold me something not even close to what they advertised. I paid return shipping on the item, so I was out a few bucks, and I left neutral feedback, not even negative. The seller was so upset that he shorted me and made me pay return shipping that he left me bad feedback even though he sold an item that wasn't what he stated. It's hard to have a system where buyer feedback is honest since it is basically another tool for bad sellers to use to pressure buyers into giving fake positive feedback instead of honest feedback.
mobung wrote:With a 3-trades cap, I would be encouraged to cancel the trade in order to keep my slots open. Sure, canceling a trade isn't a hostile action, but it still feels unpleasant when both parties are keen on said trade and will likely lead to fewer trades overall.
sebi wrote:Latest case: http://deckbox.org/users/DoctorGraim/trades
Amurphcs wrote:Im interested in knowing what the average number of transactions open are for users on here? Personally i only try to keep 1 or 2 open at once
Agentdark wrote:Honestly I dont think refusing to send first should be considered a red flag. I have known of people getting burned very badly on other sites by traders with alot more feedback/refs.
Agentdark wrote:Honestly I dont think refusing to send first should be considered a red flag. I have known of people getting burned very badly on other sites by traders with alot more feedback/refs.
Amurphcs wrote:HikingStick wrote:Wouldn't requiring a verified address for trades over a certain amount provide some of the safeguards needed? It's easier (at least in the USA) to file a mail fraud claim if the other party's address is confirmed.
While not sure I'd support the idea, a credit card or bank account (alternate payment method) could be required for trades over a certain amount. If the trade goes south, the alternate payment information could be used to make it good. This would, of course, require a revision to site rules and trade policies, and all parties of a trade would have to agree to all terms.
I would be more inclined to use a mediator. Basically both parties send to a site admin/mod and once all cards are checked and deemed accurate in terms of condition set etc then the mediator sends to respective parties
HikingStick wrote:Personally, I believe that getting into caps and limits makes things too complicated--for the users, and for the coders/admins. Why not change the trade workflow to *require* new traders to send first? The higher-rated trader is instructed not to send until they receive the cards.
HikingStick wrote:Amurphcs wrote:HikingStick wrote:Wouldn't requiring a verified address for trades over a certain amount provide some of the safeguards needed? It's easier (at least in the USA) to file a mail fraud claim if the other party's address is confirmed.
While not sure I'd support the idea, a credit card or bank account (alternate payment method) could be required for trades over a certain amount. If the trade goes south, the alternate payment information could be used to make it good. This would, of course, require a revision to site rules and trade policies, and all parties of a trade would have to agree to all terms.
I would be more inclined to use a mediator. Basically both parties send to a site admin/mod and once all cards are checked and deemed accurate in terms of condition set etc then the mediator sends to respective parties
That would require shipping both card sets twice (trader to middleman, middleman to other trader). It could also introduce claims that the middleman damaged/lost/stole cards. There's no means of compensating such middlemen, either, so I don't believe it would ever work.
HikingStick wrote:Personally, I believe that getting into caps and limits makes things too complicated--for the users, and for the coders/admins. Why not change the trade workflow to *require* new traders to send first? The higher-rated trader is instructed not to send until they receive the cards. You could enforce such logic for low trade score (<10), or if there is a large gap between two traders (one at 23 and one at 176). Let an experienced seller override that setting if willing to take a risk on a specific trade (but modify the rules and add a warning message that advises them that they may be looking for trouble and have limited recourse).
Heck, what about a warning on the trade screen if a partner has more than a certain number of open trades: "This trading partner currently has __ active trades worth $____ that are in transit and not yet completed. Many open, non-delivered trades--often adding up to large dollar amounts--may be a sign of a potential scammer. Proceed with caution and at your own risk."
Think about the amount of time and energy going into discussing an issue that is rarely a problem here (based on trade volume). Per Sebi's own disclosure, the worst case example (someone having dozens of open trades at once) is "extremely rare". And do not forget that scammers can learn any set of rules--that's why such crimes are often called "cons" (confidence games). A skilled and motivated scammer will do anything to build the required confidence to pull off the ultimate heist. Ebay had some such users in its history--sellers with stellar reputations until the day they stopped shipping and tried to disappear. What's to stop someone with one of the highest site trade ratings from simply deciding to cash in by not shipping his/her half of any number of trades? NOTHING. PERIOD. Nothing, at least, as far as the mechanics of the site go. Personal integrity, morals, and ethics are the only things that stand in the way. After all, locks on doors and windows will keep out casual or incidental intruders, but when someone with criminal intent encounters a locked door, they just reach for lock picks, a pry bar, a brick, a bump key, or some other tool to bypass your protections.
This topic comes up time and time again. It needs to be put to rest, so Sebi can focus on things that will add value to the site.
renoan wrote:Rather than restrictions on trading, what about turning this into a possible service/business opportunity?
Imagine a Deckbox service that essentially acts as an escrow service.
Possible Process
- Traders A and B have to submit pictures of their cards for them to both approve of the conditions. (This eliminates Deckbox having to verify conditions based on a subjective scale)
- Traders send cards to Deckbox escrow address
- Deckbox representative films: the opening of each envelope and each card (used as evidence that same cards were shipped as in pictures and protection from claims that Deckbox switched cards out), and the placing of cards into new envelopes (to protect against claims that Deckbox sent different cards). Alternately, something can be written into the service's terms of agreement contract that indemnifies Deckbox of any such claims
- Upon verification, Deckbox sends the cards to the new owners (likely with tracking, again for liability reasons)
Thoughts on Cost
The service would cost money to cover expenses, such as shipping fees and labor costs for having someone handle the trade. I imagine labor would be around 0.2 hours (opening, verifying against trade lists, possibly filming everything, creating new shipping labels, then putting in mailbox for shipment). Assuming minimum wage may go up to $15 in the future, after employment taxes you're looking at about $16.50/hour. At 0.2 hours of labor, that's about $3.30 in labor, maybe about $2.50 for USPS first-class or $5.50 small flat-rate box (for larger quantity trades).
Labor could be split by both parties, and shipping would depend on what someone is sending. Per trader, Deckbox's expenses would amount to about $3.65 (half of labor, $1.65, plus $2.50 first-class) for smaller shipments, and $6.65 for larger ones. Add in a 25% profit margin, and you get approximate service costs of $4.56 and $$8.31. At just 10% (I don't know Deckbox's overhead costs, so I don't know what would be feasible) the pricing would be more like $4.01 and $7.31.
Worth it or Not?
This wouldn't be economical for low-value trades, but for high-worth trades, some users may find this useful. Ultimately, the cost might not be all that much higher for some traders. If any of you are like me, I decide whether to add tracking based on my level of trust in the other trader (definitely not so the other user can track where the shipment is, I couldn't care less about that). Mail gets lost on rare occasion, but I suspect the more common culprit are traders claiming not to receive cards. Deckbox would be a trusted service, so I wouldn't feel the need to spend money on tracking when sending to Deckbox. I save money on my shipping costs, and spend a little more for the service. So, for trades above a certain monetary threshold (for me it would be around $50), the cost would be minimally higher in return for peace of mind.
Those are my initial thoughts on how such an escrow service could work (I'm sure you all can think of many other iterations). The inspiration was thinking about what the problem is we're trying to fix. People tend to get scammed on higher-value trades. Lower value scams certainly aren't pleasant, but the sky won't fall if you lose $20 in cards (let alone $5-$10). This would avoid restricting traders (an issue brought up by some), create a solution for those who are interested in a trade but normally wouldn't do it for fear of getting scammed, and would add an additional revenue source for Deckbox, paid for by those interested in the service. There may even be opportunity for including some version of this service for premium accounts, but that would have to be figured out by Deckbox's accounting team to see what would actually be worth it (perhaps X escrow trades per year for free).
Anyway, just a thought and opening this up for discussion.
sebi wrote:(Also worth noting the mentioned case is not cut-and-dried yet, I will still try to contact him further, but it is a perfect example of what the proposed system tries to prevent.)
valdor wrote:Amurphcs wrote:Im interested in knowing what the average number of transactions open are for users on here? Personally i only try to keep 1 or 2 open at once
I go through spurts but I will only ever keep a max of 5 or 6 trades going at the same time.