grossoggodeckbox wrote:Looks like you didn't read Thrun's comment. Thrun very plainly states that the sender is responsible for ensuring the cards are delivered. That did not happen in this case.
A 50/50 split is in no way fair. Lets pretend for a minute that we are not trading via the mail, but rather use this site to organize a face to face trade. OP arrives at the meeting place with cards in hand. Other trader arrives at the site and says that they lost their bag on the way there, but that if you give them the cards and they give you $15 everything is even. Does the trade happen? The definition of 'trade' is to transfer ownership of goods between people. If we accept that what I just described is a trade, then we should also accept that the trade discussed in this trade was not completed. The two parties agreed to transfer ownership of cards... which is a bit more than just sticking something in the mail. It means ensuring that the exchanged property arrives at the intended destination.
The issue here is not the value of the cards, of that the cards were lost in the mail, but rather that the trade was not completed. The cards should be returned, as simply as that.
Even though the vast majority of posters in this thread would choose to do the right thing when confronted with an unfortunate situation such as this, the official rules should be updated in a manner which makes it clear to every Doubting Thomas what the community expects of them should they find themselves in this situation.
If Thrun's comment is the official ruling on the deckbox rules, then I would be inclined to agree with you that what the traders in this case agreed to was 100% liability on the part of the sender for lost mail. The entire debate hinges on what constitutes proof of sending as per the deckbox rules, and if Thrun is an authoritative source on the subject due to his position as moderator then I'd happily defer to his judgement.
That being said, your analogy does not make any sense. The difference between a mail trade and a face to face trade is at what point each of the parties fulfill their end of the agreement. In a face-to-face trade, the agreement is done when the cards physically change hands. In the mail trade, however, the agreement is done when either the cards are in the mail, or the cards are received. This is up to the parties to either determine between themselves or determined by the standard rules, in this case the deckbox rules. If the parties agree that they have fulfilled their end of the bargain when the cards are in the mail, and it is proven they are in the mail, then they have upheld their end when the cards are in the hands of the USPS. If they agree that they have upheld their end of the bargain when the cards arrive, then the risk stays with the sender until the USPS does their job. Either way, it is up to the people involved in the mail trade to determine who holds the risk for cards that are lost in transit. Prior to Thrun's ruling, if he is the deciding authority (and no disrespect to Thrun, I just have no idea who the official arbiters of the deckbox rules are, if they've ever officially declared any), then a person reading the deckbox rules could fairly presume that if they post the cards and they have a tracking number proving the cards are in the mail, then they have upheld their end of the bargain and whatever happens next is not their responsibility. It is on that basis that I said the sender has no responsibility to the OP.