http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/askjack/2009/dec/17/ebay-shill-biddingMy bidding life on eBay is being made a nightmare by a user who pushes me to my bidding maximum on items by placing a huge bid to reveal my maximum bid, then retracting their bid, and then placing a bid just less than my maximum. I have phoned eBay and tried to report this person, but it still carries on.
David Ashcroft
After I [Jack Schofield] complained on your behalf, eBay suspended the user's account. I pointed out that if bid retraction can only be used in "special circumstances", it's ridiculous to allow a user to make more than 500 retractions in six months. eBay says it will look into this issue. In the meantime, try to avoid dealing with users who have a record of bid retraction.
Sometimes we do need to retract a bid for genuine reasons. But it's always been a problematic issue, with some claiming that people can make a huge number of bid retractions (and get away with it) and others saying there must be an automatic software-based protocol in place to prevent too many bid retractions.
Well, here we have the case of one particular "serial retractor". This individual, according to the above article,
made more than 500 retractions over a six-month period. This raised no signals to eBay, and in fact, when one particular person whose maximum bids were being revealed complained to eBay, ebay took no action.
Caveat: from the article it seems that Mr Ashcroft only tried to phone eBay, rather than using the CONTACT US form and selecting the appropriate reason.
Caveat of the caveat: The CONTACT US form is somewhat confusing. I'm looking at the UK CONTACT US form now, and I
a) had to select the [See more topics] link.
b) clicked onto "Bidding and Buying" to see whether the appropriate topic was there (it wasn't).
c) clicked onto "Rules & Reporting Members" to see whether the appropriate topic was there (hmm... "Report a Member" seems the one to choose).
d) then saw two not very noticeable links appear below the selection box, offering the two choices of
How can I report a member who is breaking eBay rules? or
A member is harassing me by email e) decided to try the
How can I report a member who is breaking eBay rules? link.
f) then saw some more information appear below the selection box, information that didn't seem to relate to the issue at all!
If you see a listing you think may be breaking our rules, please let us know. and then
We'll also investigate a member's activity if you think they're breaking our rules. Find out more about the behaviour that eBay investigates. g) am getting fed up with the tree-branch "try to find the right link and then find another link and then find another link" options. But okay, thinking it through, it's not a listing that I'd be reporting; it's someone else bidding and retracting. So perhaps the "Find out more about the behaviour that eBay investigates" link is the right one. But that looks like INFORMATION, not a way of REPORTING it, doesn't it? Oh, blast. Let's click on it anyway.
h) see a new page filled with text. Lots of text. Too much text. But scrolling down, I finally see
Buying Offences which include: Transaction interference; Offers to buy or sell outside eBay; Invalid bid retraction; Unpaid Items; Unwelcome bidding; Shill bidding
i) wonder which would be most appropriate. The person doing the bid retracting is almost certainly shill-bidding as well (unless he's a "make other people pay their maximum" hobbyist), and it could be transaction interference as well. Decisions, decisions.
j) decide upon the "Invalid bid retraction" option, and click that.
k) see another page appear. Ah, some more information. But this seems finally to be the right page. It talks about revealing another person's maximum bid (not permitted), and there's a link (hallelujah! Is it the Holy Gail of links for this particular option?). I click onto the "report this to us" link.
l) found it! I have found it! Lo, behold, here it is! The actual
reporting page! . Okay, this still seems a little clumsy. You can only enter 10 item numbers at a time. There's nowhere to put the member's ID except in the second field which says "Enter your question/concern". To report all 500-odd examples of this serial bid retractor, I'd need to find, copy and paste all 500 item numbers, which means placing 50 reports. That's a lot of work for a member with a valid complaint.
Wouldn't it be easier if:
1) eBay just had a simple page wherein all "need to contact eBay" issues were shown, and you simply select the particular reporting problem? and
2) on the reporting page, all that was needed was the member's ID, since surely eBay must have access to the full list of bid retractions placed by that member?
Why make the poor buyer do all the work?
I'm not surprised most people don't report bid retractions. It's a minotaur's maze trying to negotiate your way around eBay's reporting system. Is it deliberate, or just an example of incompetence?