Topic: Tracking and Trade Liability
This came up awhile back, but it's become pertinent again. I really dislike the current policy that says that if a user sends with tracking and the package is lost prior to delivery, the sender is considered to have fulfilled their side of the trade and the receiver eats the loss.
The basic reasoning is that in these scenarios, someone is going to eat a loss, and the person who does so should be the person who is more-likely to have made a mistake. And I would submit that if someone sends a package that ends up being lost, it's the sender's fault rather than mine - they might have messed up the packaging, they might have put an invalid address in the system that caused the package to be kicked around, etc. From my end, I have the exact same address that I've had for all 500 of my trades.
Let me highlight some scenarios here. I've just started trading internationally. Canada seems like the easiest place to send to. But there's a lot of ways to fuck up preparing a customs slip and whatnot, I'm sure, so I recognize that there's a chance that the packages I'm sending out might have issues that cause them to be kicked around for longer, and this might lead to the packages getting lost or destroyed. If this happens, it should be my fault. Even if I don't know with 100% certainty that I fucked up some aspect of the international shipping process, it makes a lot more sense to pin the liability on me.
Another scenario is that recently someone sent me a $300 package with insurance and signature confirmation. I specifically request on my profile not to send stuff with signature confirmation unless it's absolutely necessary, as my local PO is really bad with redeliveries and it means I have to track down the package at an office somewhere. Well, this time it turns out that they haven't been able to find it so far. So if the package does end up missing and I open a case, does this mean that not only do I lose out despite the sender not following my requests (which I think was an honest mistake - he didn't realize that a package insured for over $250 would require signature confirmation, and neither did I), but that he can file an insurance claim, get the value of his cards back, *and* keep my cards? I'm afraid that the answer is "yes". I'm not saying it's going to come to this, but even the possibility of it seems ridiculous to me.
I understand that there are benefits to using tracking, but one of those benefits should not be to shift the risk of your fucking up something on your end to the receiver. People should use tracking to be able to show that something was delivered. Deckbox used to require "proof of delivery", but at some point this was changed to merely require a package to be tracked. But I think that creates some bad incentives and some serious potential feel-bad scenarios, and the rules should be changed back to how they were. I'm not sure why they were ever changed to begin with.
Thoughts?
Last edited by 9700377 (2016-02-19 19:41:37)