August 31, 2009

John J. Donahoe - your eBay DCEOR’s are at 20 %

Filed under: EBAY stock, eBay Censorhip — admin @ 7:44 am

John, we can understand that many eBay sellers are opposed to the changes invoked by you on eBay venue. There will be a certain amount of negative reactions in any business. The question is - are you listening and learning? It appears that most buyer, seller feedback has been shunned, censored and silenced in the interest of eBay PR but on the account of transparency. Latest Auctionbytes is buzziing with the “eBay silencing Founding Voices Members” and you should see the unusually high number of responses to that post.

We thought it may be interesting to revisit John Donahoe’s glassdoor.com ratings that are provided by his own staff, by the people whose paycheck JD signs and see if his popularity changed since we took the pulse of John Donahoe’s CEO approval ratings. This CEO rated by his employees was at 30% approval ratings in Sept 2008 which dropped to 26% by October 2008

Today John Donahoe - the eBay CEO is holding the top rank of worst CEO list where CEOs are ranked by their own employees.

According to this article from 12/29/2008
Steve Odland of Office Depot had the highest disapproval rating at 80% (approval: 4%). He has been accused of not understanding his own business and poorly treating employees. The list continued with nine other worst rated bosses - they were Anthony LaFetra of Rain Bird, Randy Falco of AOL, Greg Brown of Motorola, Ron Rittenmeyer of EDS, James Pouliot of CSAA Inter-Insurance Bureau, Kevin Sharer of Amgen, Lynn R. Blodgett of Affiliated Computer Services, Jonathan Schwartz of Sun Microsystems, and John Donahoe of eBay. Donahoe had a disapproval rating of 49% (approval: 20%).

Glassdoor.com is a website where employees rate their own employer and CEO and eBay and JD’s ratings provide a valuable insider look stripped of the censorhip and paid PR smokescreens.

eBay Product Management Director in San Jose, CA: (Past Employee - 2007) Advice to Senior Management
“listen to your people below the mangement ranks to really understand what’s going on. more actively seek and remove leaders with bad behavior.”

eBay CSR Level 3 in Burnaby, BC (Canada): (Past Employee - 2009) Advice to Senior Management “Pay more attention to the issues that are affecting members on the site by asking employees on the front lines. Do more to educate members on changes to the site and use less fine print.”

eBay Staff Software Engineer in San Jose, CA: (Current Employee) Advice to Senior Management “Evaulate each team’s effectiveness, cut the useless organizations.”

eBay Anonymous in San Jose, CA: (Current Employee) Advice to Senior Management “Find your direction. Create a home in the space you choose to play by letting your talented team (your employees) build a solid foundation. Find the roots of a commonly shared goal from the ground up.”

eBay Anonymous in Salt Lake City, UT: (Past Employee - 2007) Advice to Senior Management “Fire John J Donahoe. We need to go back to our roots and stop pretending we are Amazon. It’s not working.”

Looks like John Donahoe is as unpopular among his employees as he is unpopular among the eBay sellers. One thing is being unpopular among the sellers (read customers who pay your fees) because you aim to change company focus on what you perceive a more profitable direction but if you cannot sell that direction to your own staff and employees, that is where a good CEO would stop and think.

December 30, 2008

eBay Community Values 2008

Filed under: To eBay or Not To Ebay, eBay Censorhip — admin @ 4:37 am

We believe people are basically good.

Except for ebay sellers….

We believe everyone has something to contribute.

Which is why we have increased fees and don’t refund listing fees on Non Paying Bidders.

We believe that an honest, open environment can bring out the best in people.

Which is why Detailed Seller Ratings are anonymous, buyer IDs and listings are hidden, and threads and posts are being removed from the eBay discussion boards.

We recognize and respect everyone as a unique individual.

That can have as many user IDs as they want because it increases our user base numbers on shareholder quarterly reports.

We encourage you to treat others the way that you want to be treated

But that doesn’t apply to ebay….

So much for the evolution of ebay community values…

December 26, 2008

Paypal Ruins Christmas for eBay Customers - Deleted Version

Browsing the news this morning, I noticed that an article of interest on PayPal was deleted from the original source at SeekingAlpha. Before it dissappears from CACHEd pages, I thought it was worth preserving. Although this is a free country, where freedom of speach is paramount pillar, some speech has more freedom than other, especially if you speak against a corporation with billions of dollars worth of influence over something as fragile as freedom of speech.

Here is an belated Christmas present for those who value this freedom.

Paypal Ruins Christmas for eBay Customers
by: Dinah Balk December 25, 2008 | about stocks: EBAY
Dinah Balk

This could happen to you. I recently read a very sad story posted on eBay’s (EBAY) Paypal discussion board. It’s about a fantastic mom (eBay id: seasonalstuff) who sold holiday decorations to earn Xmas money for her family. Unfortunately all her hard work was for nothing because the Paypal Grinch froze her account two weeks before Santa’s arrival.

What did this seller do wrong? She sold too many Xmas decorations. Then she was selected for an “account review” by the Paypal Grinch because her sales triggered Paypal’s built in false positives. She also refused to give Paypal her SSN and driver’s license number out of fear of identify theft on the advice of her attorney. I don’t blame her. I wouldn’t give Paypal my SSN or license number either because all members’ personal information is shared with eBay’s entire corporate structure, subcontractors, and God knows who else, which is really scary when you think about it .

Now multiply this situation by thousands of sellers whose funds have been held or charged back for ridiculous reasons such as: 1) false positives; 2) less than 100 feedback; 3) sold too many items; 4) etc. etc. etc. and a pattern begins to emerge.

I doubt if Donahoe ever asked himself the following questions before he added the mandatory use of Paypal to eBay’s user agreement.

What buyer will tolerate shipping delays due to a seller’s funds being held?
What seller wants their funds to be held for up to 180 days for no good reason?
What seller wants charge backs if they have a no refund policy or when a buyer experiences remorse or neglects to read an item description?
John’s mandatory Paypal policy is why Xmas Mom’s children may not have Xmas this year. Other sellers are reporting the same thing. I’m sure family members are helping out but it’s sad to think eBay’s new CEO could not have foreseen this occurring. Perhaps he didn’t care.

Here’s Xmas Mom’s story, in her own words:

Due to circumstances beyond my control I am going to have to cancel some orders and give full refunds and end all listings tonight. Paypal has decided that after over 300 completed transactions and NO problems, they need to freeze my account for a minimum of 21 days. Over the last few months I’ve sold here on eBay to save money for Christmas, times are tough as many of you know and this is a great way to earn some extra money.

It was explained to me that my account was picked to be reviewed for the simple reason that I have sold a lot of items in the past 30 days. (It is Christmas time and I do sell holiday decorations!) Anyway, this is the only reason, not because of disputes or complaints or anything else. I was told that although my account is verified by my bank account and credit card they want more personal info, my supplier’s name and address and tracking numbers for items that were shipped through Paypal!

I was also told that since they are “reviewing” my account it will remain frozen for 21 days, if I do not agree to their terms then my account will be closed and they’ll release my balance in 180 days. Here is my problem, I’m already verified. They want a copy of my SS# and drivers license too? That’s just asking for identity theft! Supplier info? I already gave it to them 3 times over the phone (all of my supplier purchases were through Paypal). Tracking numbers? I ship through Paypal! They have them! Even if I give them my personal info they are still holding my funds for 21 days!

90 percent of my current balance is for transactions that have already been delivered, days, weeks and months ago! I feel horrible having to cancel these transactions and refund some of you.

The problem is they have frozen my shipping funds and all of my Christmas money. I don’t have much cash. I can’t pay for the remaining shipping out of pocket without completely ruining Christmas for my kids. I hope you can find it in your hearts to understand. I will be leaving eBay. After I get through this mess I’m moving my inventory over to Amazon (AMZN). Those of you who are sellers too…you may want to consider it too some day. I pray that it doesn’t take something like this. I wish everyone the best and I hope your Holidays are wonderful. My apologies again.

This article has 26 comments:

» eBay +++ 31 Comments Dec 25 04:56 AM This is a real beauty — “I don’t blame her. I wouldn’t give Paypal my SSN or license number either because all members’ personal information is shared with eBay’s entire corporate structure, subcontractors, and God knows who else, which is really scary when you think about it .”

Dinah Balk you have got to be kidding? To say something like this without knowing a anything about how eBay handles it’s information is deformation of character with no basis. Watch out you Donahoe may freeze everything you have. LOL

There is no better way to pay on the internet than Paypal. I had an Account since they were bought by eBay use it frequently and have never once had an issue. I use it off eBay whenever it’s offered. Can’t how many times I’ve found something that I wanted to purchase and saw that they didn’t offer Paypal and didn’t feel like getting up to search for my Credit Card and just thought I’d come back to it latter and never purchased it. With Paypal I just log in and I’m done, no long CC # to punch in, just too easy. If I were a Seller that conversion acceleration alone is worth the fee.

That 21 days is nothing, it’s keeping everybody safe including her. If her business can’t weather that than it’s time to find a new business…

Watching the Wheels 65 Comments Dec 25 05:45 AM Ebay+++, Don’t you think that it might be a bit wiser to withhold commentary UNTIL You sell on Ebay ?

You stated that you have a Paypal account, so it would be a fairly easy thing to click a few buttons and list an item or 2 on Ebay. It would be interesting to study how willing you would really be to ship an item to an unknown person without having the money in your hand.

You might want to read through the actual Paypal contractual segments before you attempt this so you can fully appreciate these wondrous protections.

I had planned to sell on Ebay because venues offer an incredibly low cost opportunity to start a business.After watching the sweeping policy shifts that began in January of 2008, I decided that there were NO PROTECTIONS in place for the seller.

I sell on a different venue and I do utilize Paypal because of the brand recognition and increase in sales that I will receive due to their service. Fortunately I have only encountered one minor problem. I did not appreciate attempting to resolve this problem via an outsourced call center because the phone rep didn’t understand a single thing that I was attempting to convey. I did not appreciate the amoount of time it took to track down the TOLL NUMBER to be able ot speak with a rep whose primary language was the same as mine. I don’t appreciate the cost of this phone call, but on the plus side, by being willing to incur said cost, I have also provide myself with better documentation.

During the time frame that I was dealing with a glitch I attempting all the online possible solutions and got nowhere. The supposed online help’s transcripts are comical.If you repost and leave your address, I’ll send you copies.

Have you reached your spending limit yet? Are you really comfortable giving Paypal access to a bank account?

I fail to see the sence of the 21 day hold. In order to sell, there has to be some sort of bank account attached to the Paypal in order to actually get your money. If there is the necessity of refunding money, Paypal can freeze said account making the 21 day hold completely unnecessary. I f Paypal or Ebay choose to extend credit to an individual, that’s fine. I choose not to.

Hirorir 1 Comment Dec 25 06:20 AM Sorry to hear about this, Paypal can be a real annoyance sometimes; it’s also real cruddy that you had to be hit down on Christmas season too.
I’d advise you to go hardcore on this and file complaints on them for holding your funds for these 21 days (with intention to use on Holiday Season) with improper reasoning (if possible lead to sue). Your SSN should NOT be asked by Paypal, regardless of the reviewer. I believe Paypal should have a “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy? After all, they have all the information they’ll ever need right in their storage.

lucky lenny 33 Comments Dec 25 06:29 AM To combat fraud, to hold funds for a a month or so to make sure the seller isn’t a fraud, makes sense to me. I’m in agreement with Paypal on this one.

fairytrixy 5 Comments Dec 25 06:43 AM HoHoHo ebay+++

Next time you post it might be wise to do so prior to having a cocktail:)

Cheers!

eBuyer Feedback 3 Comments Dec 25 06:48 AM I had basically the same thing happen to me last year. I had a lot of listings going on (featured plus) with immediate PayPal payment required. eBay wouldn’t close the listings and refund my fees even though it was their fault my listings couldn’t sell. They told me it was my problem and I needed to contact PayPal. They even had the nerve to hang up on me in the middle of the conversation.

I had a customer from Russia that had paid the day before. I normally use Stamps.com and Endicia to do my postage but those wouldn’t work for their address. USPS Click-n-ship wouldn’t work either. That only left PayPal shipping. But since my account was limited I was expressly forbidden from printing postage through them.

PayPal took several days to clear up the block but by then my listings were all ruined and I lost several customers. I guess I trusted them with my personal information (that’s the only thing I trust eBay/PayPal with) and that is what led to the different outcome for me.

I was very lucky that I avoided a wave of negative feedback and chargebacks in the middle of that ordeal. I know how eBay users are and if they strongly suspect a scam they’ll rush their trading partner right out of business and then eBay uses those negs and chargebacks to justify kicking you off and holding your money indefinitely (which also leads to even more chargebacks).

Funny thing is one week they were congratulating me on becoming a gold powerseller. The next week they told me I was selling too much and almost trashed my 5 year old business.

Paul Price 176 Comments Dec 25 06:52 AM The vendor states she “had to give refunds” as her payments were being held up.

Why her account had been credited when the buyers paid. She could ship normally and her funds (if they were actually held up by PayPal) would have been released after 21 days.

We have no evidence that her story is even accurate. Anybody can say anything. Perhaps this whole episode was planted by someone short EBAY stock?

Regardless of that, I don’t see how cancelling transactions was necessary or what it accomplished. The buyers get the merchandise- the seller got paid.

If she didn’t like PayPal she could arrange for other forms of payment that she thinks are more acceptable to her.

Paul Price 176 Comments Dec 25 06:58 AM Every single article from this author’s name is a critical piece on EBAY.

She does not appear to have any intent here on Seeking Alpha other than to create ill-will towards EBAY and/or to hurt the stock.

Dinah Balk is not a stock analyst- she is working for the shorts on EBAY.

redbaron 169 Comments Dec 25 07:20 AM Paul, you need to try to sell on eBay first, before commenting on this situation. If you really have an interest here, why not go ahead and give it a try? You likely have some merchandise laying around, and the software is easy to use. Selling would for sure give you a different perspective on the situation, and would certainly add some credibility to your comments.

Without some personal experience, your thoughts have no substance or credibility. Ebay and PayPal are changing the rules to their advantage, during the holiday seasonal selling climax, and putting their customers (sellers are the only ones paying fees here) at risk of financial ruin. You are making assumptions here on a situation about which you know nothing.

You are correct about one thing, however, Dinah Balk is not a stock analyst, and that to me makes her very much more credible.

Dinah Balk 157 Comments Dec 25 08:37 AM Good morning everyone -

Got lots of Xmas stuff to do. Will be stopping by later when I have more time.

Merry Xmas!

arlin 18 Comments Dec 25 09:42 AM Dear Dinah
Manty thanks for your informative reports throughout the year.
Merry Christmas.

Paul Price 176 Comments Dec 25 11:03 AM redbaron,

I do sell through Ebay and use PayPal regularly with zero problems.

fatseal 5 Comments Dec 25 11:33 AM Do you not know that there is no other form of payment on ebay? It’s paypal or a merchant account.

Dinah Balk 157 Comments Dec 25 11:34 AM Here is Paypal’s Privacy Policy just in case anyone is interested.

You must log into your Paypal account. Go to the bottom of the home page and click on Legal Agreements. On the next page, underneath Agreements For All Users, click on Privacy Policy.

Please note that eBay’s corporate family is substantially larger than what was stated. My website has a complete listing of the entire corporate family.

How we share personal information with other parties

We may share your personal information with:

Members of the eBay Inc. corporate family — like eBay, Shopping.com or Skype — to provide joint content and services (like registration, transactions and customer support), to help detect and prevent potentially illegal acts and violations of our policies, and to guide decisions about their products, services and communications. Members of our corporate family will use this information to send you marketing communications only if you have requested their services.

Service providers under contract who help with parts of our business operations; (fraud prevention, bill collection, marketing, technology services). Our contracts dictate that these service providers only use your information in connection with the services they perform for us and not for their own benefit.

Financial institutions that we partner with to jointly create and offer a product such as the PayPal Plus credit card where we share information with GE Money Bank to determine whether you should receive pre-approved offers for the PayPal Plus credit card. These financial institutions may only use this information to market PayPal-related products, unless you have given consent for other uses.

Credit bureaus to report outstanding negative balance accounts, as allowed by law.
Companies that we plan to merge with or be acquired by. (Should such a combination occur, we will require that the new combined entity follow this privacy policy with respect to your personal information. If your personal information could be used contrary to this policy, you will receive prior notice.)

Law enforcement, government officials, or other third parties when
we are compelled to do so by a subpoena, court order or similar legal procedure
we need to do so to comply with law
we believe in good faith that the disclosure of personal information is necessary to prevent physical harm or financial loss, to report suspected illegal activity, or to investigate violations of our User Agreement.
Other third parties with your consent or direction to do so.

fatseal 5 Comments Dec 25 11:36 AM The seller got paid, but she left all her money in paypal( there is a very long thread on the boards about it) and all her paypal money ($1600) was frozen. She has no money to even pay for shipping. Glad you can take having $1600.00 frozen in your account. Most people can’t.

ezduzit 30 Comments Dec 25 12:05 PM any person who comments about a “short” attacking e-bay, on this site, is off the deep end in his (her) thinking. the stock price has its own mind.
as far as the other posted comments, when you can’t get in touch with customer service, without jumping through hoops, that’s a serious problem. it shows a lack of respect and consideration towards people who work for a living.

bigger companies than e-bay have bitten the bullet because of flawed company management and poor customer relations. Reply | Link to Comment +10 RicRoe 4 Comments Dec 25 12:22 PM eBay’s problems are self inflicted. The more eBay has done in the name of bringing business back to their site, the more they have alienated current users that were once infatuated with the market place as both buyers and sellers.

eBay started to seriously slide when John Donahoe as CEO came out in front of changes which gutted the core of the marketplace and referred to any member that spoke out against the changes as ‘noise’. His arrogant ‘noise’ label insulted the very customers he was trying to keep.

Led by an executive team that has barely used the marketplace, eBay is now headed for obscurity because they do not ‘get’ it anymore.

eBay, unlike Amazon, does not own inventory, and relies on sellers to provide merchandise to the site. This said, it is hard to understand why eBay executives have instituted so many anti seller policies over the past year.

Further proof of how out of sync eBay leadership is, they fail to understand that sellers are buyers as well. Alienating sellers diminishes their interest in purchasing from the site or doing business in any way with a company that is viewed as seller unfriendly.

eBay’s increased fees across the board and forcing sellers to accept PayPal to entitle them to an even larger slice of sellers profits, has not improved the company’s fortunes, but has motivated sellers to take their business elsewhere.

eBay has become a ship without a rudder, adrift in a marketplace they have lost control of.

eBay execs fail to understand that word of mouth is essential to the success of their marketplace. With sellers having nothing positive to say, buyers are going elsewhere.

Until eBay is led by a team of executives with vision and experience in what makes eBay tick, eBay is destined to become the next Internet bubble to burst.

Buyers and sellers alike have lost trust and confidence in current leadership over the series of poorly implemented policies, feedback changes, imposition of the failed DSR system, constant technical glitches, search that is horrible, forced PayPal etc…

eBay is now beyond reversing failed policy and system changes. eBay now has to replace the entire core of enthusiastic members which they have managed to chase in addition to changing the failed policies and defective systems.

The simplest solution would be for eBay to simply get out of being in the marketplace business since it is obvious they have no clue as to what it takes to make and keep a marketplace relevant and successful.

John Donahoe, Lorrie Norrington and company will go down in history as the executives that managed to screw up a free lunch.

They are not the team that will lead eBay out of the disaster they created, they are the team that turned a marketplace with millions of happy members into a poor imitation of its competition with customers who have nothing good to say about the new experience.

This is unlikely to change until the book smart MBA’s are removed, and replaced by a team of executives that know and understand what the eBay marketplace is.

The fix would be for Mr Omidyer to get back to work, and restore the core principles upon which eBay was founded. He had the right ideas and the company became a worldwide multi billion dollar success under those principles.

eBay’s only chance to restore itself to that level of success will be when the existing leadership is tossed and replaced with a team that ‘gets’ eBay.

steve577 9 Comments Dec 25 12:51 PM This article is SO typical of sellers with bad attitudes that enjoy criticizing
ebay for the wonderful changes that made it a better, safer place for
buyers. As to the specifics of this article, anybody that doesn’t trust
paypal doesn’t deserve PayPal’s trust.

o.c.d.collectibles 34 Comments Dec 25 01:12 PM I was banned from posting on the discussion boards after 10 years here, never has this EVER happened to me. I have the best documentation, because legally, I understand (from being a Nurse!!), which policies and procedures are, that place me at risk. To have me suppressed when I state my opinion in non-confrontative ways, is a form of suppressing freedom of speech on a public forum. I’ve been given a “7 day sanction” so that I can “spend more time” reading and digesting ebay’s board posting policies.

After 10 good 100% 4.9 rated years, I just disconnected my reports subscription and deactivated the credit card associated with my account.

Not only will I not allow ebay to treat me this way as a customer, but I will make it my business to let every stock and financial site that I can register on, know what is going on amongst ebay’s most loyal and longest law abiding citizens and their unscrupulous tactics in censorship.

Censoring the ability to mention the names of other sites to sell on is not advertising. If it WAS advertising, I would be making an income doing that. At this point in time, I have NOTHING posted to sell on any site AT ALL. I sell “live” in antique booths. I do not need online sales to make my life complete. I used to enjoy them, and the socialzation I had from ebay selling. Now that THAT is gone, I have nothing to lose letting the world know of ebay’s censorship rules amongst their discussion boards.

I will not let up until I see the desired effect, you guys can all count on it!
So far, I have already described the ridiculous changes and the re-design of the site, with all of it’s glitches, malfunctions, and breakages. Now I will be focusing on something else….abuse of it’s oldest and most loyal, “high grade” sellers, who simply voice their opinions.

riversniper 2 Comments Dec 25 01:23 PM Never get verified, If you do then open a separate bank account that is not connected to your personal banking or checking account. Trust me on this riversniper

o.c.d.collectibles 34 Comments Dec 25 01:43 PM I have no need to sell on a site that treats me with so much indignity. After all the income provided for them,over the many years I was there, and so many happy customers, they will not get another dime from me now.
My rating is excellent. I left the site SIMPLY because of the WAY they treat their honest sellers.

They are selectively “deaf, dumb and blind” to their registered racketeers who really ARE swindling the new buyers on their site with poor service. They manipulate the bad ratings of these large retailers who get a free ride, listing on their site, just to make the seller still look good. There have been detections of this practice going on, and it is highly fraught with favoritism not based on ebay’s own policies. Ebay is scamming every OTHER fee paying member/seller due to this issue, and it won’t be long before someone exposes this publicly.
Paypal only practices the exploitive practices on ebay. They would not be doing that on anyone else’s site

There is something really wrong on this site, they deserve a SEC investigation.

Dinah, thank you for posting invaluable information to the public. They deserve to read the truth about this company before they decide to invest.
I wouldn’t invest unless I knew the CEO team was being fired.

eBay +++ 31 Comments Dec 25 02:06 PM I have sold on eBay whenever it’s time to clean out the garage and I have only offered Paypal. They are linked to my Acccount, no problems, not once. Would not think of Selling any other way.

o.c.d.collectibles 34 Comments Dec 25 02:20 PM The cheerleaders are no more than investors in ebay stock who have lost their shirts after investing when the stock was in the 20’s and 30’s. Sorry guys, you made a big mistake buying stock in this company so late in the game, OR maybe too early! If the imbeciles who run this company, finally leave, THEN you should buy some more stock! Wait till it hits $5 a share. It will. Maybe by then, the Board of Directors will wake up and hire some qualified leaders.

Patricia013 62 Comments Dec 25 02:21 PM How very strange…..I’ve had a Paypal shopping cart on my own website for years now. Never had a chargeback, never had funds held and don’t forget there is no feedback or DSR’s to consider. I would like to know why Paypal turns into a different animal when an Ebay transaction is concerned? Then they hold funds and act like thiefs in plain english. I think we all know Ebay is making money off the float of all those held funds. They have found yet one more way to skin a seller! Ebay, you go far beyong “its only business” and into a realm of sleaziness the depths of which I have never seen before!!! If, as a seller, they held my funds then they would have one angry buyer on their hands. Nothing ever leaves here that isn’t paid for with the funds in my account where they belong! If that means gathering a neg…so be it. If that means having my account closed…so be it! That would be the final straw for me.

Philip Cohen 11 Comments Dec 25 02:45 PM eBay is knowingly facilitating fraud on buyers

Can anyone explain to me why users in Australia, the UK, Ireland and the Philippines, have the absolutely anonymous alias (”Bidder N”) while New Zealand (and the rest of the world) has the effectively bidder-specific alias (”a***b (N)”)?

The material difference between these two forms of anonymous alias is, in the case of the “a***b (N)” alias, at a given point in time when viewed in conjunction with the accompanying feedback count, it is effectively bidder-specific: experienced buyers can still check a seller’s other auctions to watch out for at least any instances of blatant shill bidding; and with the absolutely anonymous alias (”Bidder N”), buyers have got absolutely no chance of detecting even the most blatant of shill bidding by an unscrupulous seller.

And, please, don’t try to tell me that the new “Bidder History” page enables buyers to spot a shill bidder: that is simply one more blatantly nonsensical and disingenuous eBay claim. Nor does eBay have any “sophisticated software” for the detection of shill bidding: they still rely primarily on user reports: trouble is, users can no longer report, because users can no longer detect! And, eBay’s excuse for introducing such anonymous aliases, to stop fraudulent second chance offers, is pathetic and undoubtedly disingenuous.

Further, in the US, eBay initially introduced the absolutely anonymous alias (”Bidder N”) and then retreated therefrom to the effectively bidder-specific alias (”a***b (N)”). Strangely, the opposite has been the case in the UK where eBay went from “a***b (N)” to “Bidder N”! (Does anyone in this organisation actually know what is going on?)

The application of the absolutely anonymous alias, “Bidder N”, would appear to serve only one purpose and that is to obscure any blatant shill bidding, that would otherwise be obvious, so that buyers can’t detect it, can’t then report it, and eBay does not have to waste any of their valuable resources pretending to do anything about it.

Whether intentional or not, eBay’s application of the absolutely anonymous alias (”Bidder N”) is effectively an “aiding and abetting” of fraud on buyers. What is our governmental consumer affairs regulators doing about this reprehensible behaviour by eBay?

Lengthy, detailed comments on this matter commence at
http://www.auctionbytes.com/forum/phpBB/viewtopic.php?p=6499794#6499794

User 325862 1 Comment Dec 25 03:09 PM I have been using eBay and PayPal. Once someone tried to cheat me on ebay and paypal helped me their buyer protection. this is true and it happened earlier this year. i am an occassional seller on eBay too.

there is so much anti-ebay and paypal being posted. maybe your stories are true, only god knows. I dont want to just antogonize someone, atleast on christmas day (for god’s sake). I see the same set of people posting junk about companies time and again in various forums.

I dont have any issues on ebay or paypal. if someone’s account is locked, either they have been alerted on fraud for anti-money laundering or some other genuine reason.

why would anyone just freeze anyone’s account, especially your customers? use commonsense.

September 11, 2008

Institutions continue dumping eBay Shares

Filed under: EBAY stock, To eBay or Not To Ebay, eBay Censorhip — admin @ 3:05 am

Net Institutional Purchases - 1s Qtr 2008 to 2nd Qtr 2008

Net Shares Purchased (Sold) (89,598,700)
% Change in Institutional Shares Held (10.8%)

Net Institutional Purchases - 4th Qtr 2007 to 1st Qtr 2008
Shares
Net Shares Purchased (Sold) (30,998,100)
% Change in Institutional Shares Held (3.5%)

So it appears that institutions have dumped three times as many shares in second quarter 2008 compared to first quarter 2008.

No matter how eBay corporate serves their PR Cool Aid, the bottom line is, the company is suffering from MBAaitis : a clueless bunch of MBAs running the auction site to the ground.

Check out the eBay Stock message board on Yahoo Finance or it’s counterpart eBay Stock Message board on Google : it’s carnage time! eBay has been heavily censoring sellers and customers disclosing their dismay with eBay management on it’s own site, so some sellers moved those discussions to the eBay STOCK forums to let the shareholders know “there is something rotten in the state of eBay”

eBay shares have hit 1 year low and 3 year low this week $22.70
Trade Time: Sep 9 and it appears that recovery is not in sight any time soon.

Update 9/25/2008 If you watch volume on eBay shares, you will not be able to help but notice a pattern of someone dumping unusually high volumes of eBay shares past few days right at the end of trading day.

Past 5 trading days a muti-million share dumps end of each day.

September 7, 2008

PayPal Protection Scam Logistics

Filed under: PayPal, eBay Censorhip — admin @ 8:38 am

How does PayPal protection scam work?

In this case I am referring to a scam perpetrated by eBay who owns PayPal, not by some nickle and dime scammers utilizing eBay platforms.

There have been many accusations that PayPal Purchase Protection policy is only illusionary and that PayPal is by far not as safe as using credit cards for payment.

Here are some real time facts that will illustrate how eBay frauds victims when it comes to presenting PayPal Purchase Protection as a selling point but when it comes time to “make good” on this protection, real users report they are getting screwed by eBay/PayPal.

OK, let’s get to it:

  • One of the top ten eBay Australia sellers appears to have skipped the country leaving what looks like close to 1,000 or so eBay buyers who paid for product during past 60 days without receiving their product. The seller’s feedback is currently logging over 650 negative feedbacks in past 30 days from defrauded buyers.. Todays estimates (and this number may grow) range from $500,000 to over $1,500,000 in funds this seller accepted without delivering the product.
  • IT Wire published this article about PayPal Protection being completely illusory. This article cites a group who warns eBay PayPal users against using PayPal because the buyer protection is very limited and definitely not as advertised. They also point out that eBay Forums have had numerous warning posts about this failed seller and eBay Censors deleted those posts. The article links to one eBay Forum thread that seemed to escape the censorhip, so far.
  • The eBay seller ebusiness_supplies is still a registered user, however all their auctions have been terminated on about July 8th. We have archived screenshots of the feedback page, just ready to publish in case eBay censors it out and tries to hide the evidence on their site.
  • Anticipating the censorhip, as it is a favorite eBay way to prove there is no fraud on eBay, we are also archiving the current eBay Forum thread, as it is in a danger of being dissappeared by accident.

While reading an article about eBay hiring new Director of Reputation Management and giving him a $1,000,000 plus sign up bonus… (later post will probably follow on that topic alone), I hopped through footnoted.org blog post on the subject who had a nice link to eBay’s filing for 2nd quarter 2008 which offers wealth of interesting information on PayPal policies and strategy. Here are some quotes from this document that appear to be relevant as you read on:

  • In addition, because a large percentage of PayPal transactions originate on the eBay platform, declines in growth rates in major Marketplaces markets also adversely affect PayPal’s growth rate. The expected future growth of our PayPal, Skype, StubHub, Shopping.com, and other lower margin businesses may also cause downward pressure on our profit margins because those businesses have lower gross margins than our Marketplaces platforms.
  • PayPal is subject to anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing laws and regulations that prohibit, among other things, its involvement in transferring the proceeds of criminal activities. Although PayPal has adopted a program to comply with these laws and regulations, any errors or failure to implement the program properly could lead to lawsuits, administrative action, and prosecution by the government. In July 2003, PayPal agreed with the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri that it would pay $10 million as a civil forfeiture to settle allegations that its provision of services to online gambling merchants violated provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act and further agreed to have its compliance program reviewed by an independent audit firm. PayPal is also subject to regulations that require it to report suspicious activities involving transactions of $2,000 or more and may be required to obtain and keep more detailed records on the senders and recipients in certain transfers of $3,000 or more. The interpretation of suspicious activities in this context is uncertain. Future regulations under the USA PATRIOT Act may require PayPal to revise the procedures it uses to verify the identity of its customers and to monitor international transactions more closely.
  • Negative publicity and user sentiment generated as a result of fraudulent or deceptive conduct by users of our eBay and PayPal services could damage our reputation, reduce our ability to attract new users or retain our current users, and diminish the value of our brand names. We believe that negative user experiences are one of the primary reasons users stop using our services.
  • Although there have been no definitive interpretations to date, PayPal has assumed that its service is subject to the Electronic Fund Transfer Act and Regulation E of the Federal Reserve Board. As a result, among other things, PayPal must provide advance disclosure of changes to its service, follow specified error resolution procedures and reimburse consumers for losses above $50 from transactions not authorized by the consumer. PayPal currently voluntarily reimburses consumers for all financial losses from transactions not authorized by the consumer, not just losses above $50. PayPal seeks to pass most of these losses on to the relevant merchants, but PayPal incurs losses if the merchant does not have sufficient funds in its PayPal account.
  • PayPal pays significant transaction fees when senders fund payment transactions using credit cards, nominal fees when customers fund payment transactions by electronic transfer of funds from bank accounts, and no fees when customers fund payment transactions from an existing PayPal account balance or use buyer credit issued by GE Money Bank. Senders fund a significant portion of PayPal’s payment volume using credit cards, and PayPal’s financial success will remain highly sensitive to changes in the rate at which its senders fund payments using credit cards. Senders may prefer funding using credit cards rather than bank account transfers for a number of reasons, including the ability to dispute and reverse charges directly with their credit card provider if merchandise is not delivered or is not as described, the ability to earn frequent flier miles or other incentives offered by credit card issuers, the ability to defer payment, or a reluctance to provide bank account information to PayPal. The proportion of PayPal’s payment volume funded using credit cards has increased over time.
  • In September 2006, PayPal entered into a settlement agreement with the attorneys general of a number of states under which it agreed to pay $5.2 million to the attorneys general, shorten and streamline its user agreement, and communicate more information regarding protection programs to users. Also in September 2006, PayPal announced that it had reached a preliminary settlement agreement under which it agreed to pay approximately $3.5 million into a settlement fund for the benefit of a class represented by plaintiffs in a suit that alleged, among other things, that PayPal’s disclosure regarding the effects of users’ choice of funding mechanism was deceptive. Although PayPal did not admit any liability for any of the allegations in the two cases, changes to our disclosure practices could result in increased use of credit card funding, which could harm PayPal’s business.
    .

  • Our PayPal website has suffered intermittent unavailability for periods as long as five days.

  • Reliability is particularly critical for PayPal, especially as it seeks to expand its Merchant Services business. Because PayPal is a regulated financial entity, frequent or persistent site interruptions could lead to fines, penalties, or mandatory changes to PayPal’s business practices, and ultimately could cause PayPal to lose existing licenses it needs to operate. Some of our systems, including our Shopping.com and Skype websites, are not fully redundant, and our disaster recovery planning is not sufficient for all eventualities. We do not carry business interruption insurance sufficient to compensate us for losses that may result from interruptions in our service as a result of system failures.

September 6, 2008

Employees rate eBay

There is a brand new site online that lets current and past employees rate their employers. It appears that eBay sellers and buyers are not the only ones disenchanted with eBay CEO and the company management. Take a look how eBay employees rate eBay.

Here is a summary of 10 ratings out of 100 today as of writing of this post:

Aug 22, 2008
3 found helpful
“eBay attracts a lot of great people, then the company culture beats them down and they leave within a couple of years.…”
Senior Product Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)

Sep 5, 2008
“Great company! Wouldn’t work anywhere else…”
Anonymous

Sep 5, 2008
“Exciting things are happening at eBay!…”
Visual Designer in San Jose, CA (United States)

Sep 3, 2008
“If you’re considering a job at eBay, look elsewhere.…”
Interaction Designer in San Jose, CA (United States.)

Sep 3, 2008
“Don’t treat us like th paper you you wipe with.…”
Customer Sercvice in Vancouver (Canada)

Sep 3, 2008
“Used to be a great place to work, now it’s just a job…”
Senior Director in San Jose, CA (United States)

Sep 3, 2008
“If you’re bright, passionate, and energetic, you’ll eventually become drained and resent everything you ever worked for.…”
Marketing Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)

Sep 2, 2008
“Ebay can be better with changes.…”
Software Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States)

Aug 22, 2008
“Too many MBA’s - not enough people who love the web…”
Senior Content Manager

Aug 20, 2008
1 found helpful
“ebay stuck in a wheel which goes round and round and never goes up…”
Senior Software Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States)

I first found a mention of this on Yahoo Finance Forum for eBay stock on 9/3/2008 and it looked like this:

Overall Company Rating 3.2
CEO Approval Rating 32%

1 - 10 of 91 Reviews by eBay Employees

Aug 22, 2008
“eBay attracts a lot of great people, then the company culture beats them down and they leave within a couple of years.…”
Senior Product Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)

Aug 22, 2008
“Too many MBA’s - not enough people who love the web…”
Senior Content Manager

Aug 20, 2008
“ebay stuck in a wheel which goes round and round and never goes up…”
Senior Software Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States)

Aug 26, 2008
“tremendous opportunities, if only we would get our heads on straight and choose a visionary plan and leadership…”
Product Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)

Aug 24, 2008
“Wounded company that needs to find its way again…”
Senior Marketing Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)

Aug 22, 2008
“Corporate politics is rewarded over hard work and dedication.…”
Account Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)

Aug 20, 2008
“eBay stuck in a wheel which goes round and round but never goes up :(…”
Senior Software Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States)

Aug 19, 2008
“Great place to work with opportunities to grow…”
Software Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States)

Aug 19, 2008
“stuck in “turnaround” hell — we’ll see how it all shakes out. a lot (too much) change going on right now…”
Senior Category Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)

Aug 21, 2008
“Decent place to work…”
Product Manager in Campbell, CA (United States)

Next I found a similar post on eBay Seller Central forum, that one was dated September 2nd

So apparently this website must have come to attention of eBay corporate PR people as they have promptly sent two faithfull employees to give it such a nice rating that glaringly contradicts those 90 plus other rating: see the two latest ratings from Sept 5th.:

Sep 5, 2008
“Great company! Wouldn’t work anywhere else…”
Anonymous

Sep 5, 2008
“Exciting things are happening at eBay!…”
Visual Designer in San Jose, CA (United States)

It’s a shame that eBay feels they have to censor and decieve on all fronts. Those two consecutive emplyee praises from yesterday are just way too obvious when compared with the rest of the reviews. But again, eBay top management is not very bright so you cannot expect them to be very sophisticated in their efforts to censor out the truth.

The eBay Message Forum at Seller Central posts a full version of those 10 reviews and those are quite enlightening in case a shareholder wants to know what’s really going on in the company and what eBay will not tell you in their quarterly report. Here are full versions of the 10 employee reviews of eBay as posted on eBay Seller Central forum.

Aug 22, 2008
2.0
Details
Career Opportunities 3.0
Communication 2.0
Compensation & Benefits 3.0
Employee Morale 1.5
Recognition & Feedback 3.0
Senior Leadership 1.0
Work/Life Balance 3.5
Fairness & Respect 1.5
Disapproves of CEO

“eBay attracts a lot of great people, then the company culture beats them down and they leave within a couple of years.”
Senior Product Manager in San Jose, CA (United States) Past Employee (2007)
Pros
It’s a good name to have on your resume, and you will be working for a company that provides a living to millions of people. Bonus structure is good for a tech company.
Cons
Upper management is inept and tends to “swoop” in and make arbitrary changes to projects without supporting data. Politics is nasty, especially on the business side of things. There is significant favoritism given towards skinny blonde chicks by some senior managers. It takes a lot of work to get products out. John Donahoe is, I expect, going to run the company into the ground; he doesn’t understand the eBay ecosystem, and driving Rajiv Dutta out of the company was a truly crazy thing for him to do.
Advice to Senior Management
Ditch your CEO and start LISTENING to your wailing employees.

Aug 22, 2008
2.0
Details
Career Opportunities 3.0
Communication 1.0
Compensation & Benefits 2.5
Employee Morale 1.0
Recognition & Feedback 2.0
Senior Leadership 2.0
Work/Life Balance 3.0
Fairness & Respect 1.5
Disapproves of CEO

“Too many MBA’s - not enough people who love the web”
Senior Content Manager Current Employee
Pros
Good intentions of management on work life balance. Free soda. Staff cafeteria. Bus with wifi between San Francisco and campus. Most people are great to work with. Good christmas parties.
Cons
Good intentions on work life balance worthless when unable to hire even replacement staff while increasing the workload. Decisions made by MBAs who don’t know anything about the web or web design, so user experience is awful. San Jose is a hole. Stock options worthless. Too much consensus decision making which means decisions are too slow to make and end up sub-optimal just to compromise. No one single visionary you can believe in.
Advice to Senior Management
Stop taking your staff for granted. You are breaking them.

Aug 20, 2008
2.0
Details
Career Opportunities 3.0
Communication 1.5
Compensation & Benefits 3.0
Employee Morale 2.0
Recognition & Feedback 2.5
Senior Leadership 1.5
Work/Life Balance 3.0
Fairness & Respect 1.0
Disapproves of CEO
“ebay stuck in a wheel which goes round and round and never goes up”
Senior Software Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States) Current Employee
Pros
Culture, history, nothing, else, tocomment
Cons
politics, bickering, weak management, unfairness, low morale
Advice to Senior Management
hopefully solve problems of employees and give them a passion and reason to contribute.

Aug 26, 2008
4.0
Details
Career Opportunities 4.0
Communication 2.0
Compensation & Benefits 3.0
Employee Morale 3.0
Recognition & Feedback 3.0
Senior Leadership 2.0
Work/Life Balance 4.5
Fairness & Respect 3.0
Disapproves of CEO

“tremendous opportunities, if only we would get our heads on straight and choose a visionary plan and leadership”
Product Manager in San Jose, CA (United States) Current Employee
Pros
For better or worse, eBay is a large company. Even if you start at eBay doing one job, there’s tremendous opportunity to more around the company if you are apt and willing. eBay also attacks problems of tremendous scale, unmatched anywhere on the web. How we handle them is sometimes questionable, but there’s no doubt that we are the biggest game in town.
Cons
Management is schizophrenic and quarter-driven. Even when we were promised that we were NOT going to be quarter driven, we still see a highly detrimental focus on making the projection for Wall St.
Internally, everything not aligned with the current soup du ‘jour is likely to be canceled, paused, downsized or outright ignored. Also there are far too many doers and not enough thinkers hired here. This company is run by people who “have ideas”, whether they are well-planned or not.
Advice to Senior Management
Settle down. STOP focusing on the near term. Chill out, plan ahead and start treating this company like it’s going to be around for 100 years. If you don’t treat it that way, then it won’t be. If you keep treating it like it will only be around another 3 to 5 years, then Wall St. will assume that too.

Aug 24, 2008
2.0
Details
Career Opportunities 2.5
Communication 2.0
Compensation & Benefits 3.0
Employee Morale 2.0
Recognition & Feedback 3.0
Senior Leadership 2.0
Work/Life Balance 4.0
Fairness & Respect 3.5
Disapproves of CEO

“Wounded company that needs to find its way again”
Senior Marketing Manager in San Jose, CA (United States) Current Employee
Pros
Used to be the quality of the team - smart, vibrant people and a clear, defined mission for the business. Those things are changing, so now I’d say it’s still a company with potential, as soon as the “turnaround” is over.
Cons
Unclear decision-making, lack of accountability and disregard for critical functions that aren’t directly driving the business, but are still indispensible.
Advice to Senior Management
Articulate a vision and get people invested in it. Right now, people are operating in crisis mode, but there isn’t a lot of compelling reasons to stay. As the good folks hit the road with more and more frequency, “put your head down and get your work done” is less a rallying cry and more a threat. And even if the job market is so-so right now, attrition isn’t going to get any better without inspiration from the leaders of the company.

Aug 22, 2008
2.0
Details
Career Opportunities 2.5
Communication 2.0
Compensation & Benefits 2.5
Employee Morale 2.0
Recognition & Feedback 1.0
Senior Leadership 1.0
Work/Life Balance 2.5
Fairness & Respect 1.0
Disapproves of CEO

“Corporate politics is rewarded over hard work and dedication.”
Account Manager in San Jose, CA (United States) Current Employee
Pros
Good benefits package. Great coworkers.
Cons
Incompetant supervisors who micro-manage rather than encourage and support.
Advice to Senior Management
Trust and respect of employees could result in a more loyal and dedicated workforce.

Aug 20, 2008
2.0
Details
Career Opportunities 2.5
Communication 1.5
Compensation & Benefits 3.0
Employee Morale 2.0
Recognition & Feedback 2.5
Senior Leadership 2.0
Work/Life Balance 3.5
Fairness & Respect 1.0
Disapproves of CEO
1 of 2 people found this helpful
“eBay stuck in a wheel which goes round and round but never goes up ”
Senior Software Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States) Current Employee
Pros
The brand is well recognized. The company is full of intelligent people to learn from. A good place to learn about how internet business works.
Cons
The middle management is very incompetent and totally screwed up. They are busy in too many useless meetings and keep dishing out BS to employees.Too much politics.
Compensation here is lower than average. Promotions are given based more on politics than actual job performance.
Bloated infrastructure and organization. Change is slow and by the time it happens is often outdated. Very few opportunities for career advancement.
Advice to Senior Management
Clean up the fat layer from the middle. Get rid of middle layer instead of getting rid of engineers. There are way too many directors and VPs for a company this size

Aug 19, 2008
4.0
Details
Career Opportunities 4.0
Communication 4.0
Compensation & Benefits 3.0
Employee Morale 4.0
Recognition & Feedback 5.0
Senior Leadership 3.0
Work/Life Balance 4.0
Fairness & Respect 4.0
No Opinion of CEO
“Great place to work with opportunities to grow”
Software Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States) Current Employee
Pros
With a great work atmosphere, there are various opportunities provided for individuals to shine and grow within their teams. Employee training is encouraged, and management makes every attempt to provide projects based on the type of work employees want to do. With the number of changes happening this year, senior management has been very communicative and responsive, which is great to see.
Cons
A better work-life balance atmosphere would be beneficial. Due to the large nature of the organization, decision making takes a long time as you have to go through a lot of red tape. Company seems to be more reactive than proactive, always trying to catch up with competition as opposed to setting trends.
Advice to Senior Management
Biggest question most employees ask is - Are we a Business company or a Technology company? To me, it seems we are a business company that tries to behave as a technology company. It should in fact be vice versa. Senior management needs to cleary define who we are, and work towards implementing the same. They should take calculated risks, become more proactive, and need to make decisions quicker.

Aug 19, 2008
4.0
Details
Career Opportunities 4.0
Communication 2.5
Compensation & Benefits 4.0
Employee Morale 4.0
Recognition & Feedback 2.5
Senior Leadership 3.0
Work/Life Balance 4.0
Fairness & Respect 3.0
Disapproves of CEO
“stuck in “turnaround” hell — we’ll see how it all shakes out. a lot (too much) change going on right now”
Senior Category Manager in San Jose, CA (United States) Current Employee
Pros
great brand name, real impact on people’s lives, removing inefficiencies from marketplaces - its nice to work for a company that is universally known (but sometimes passionately hated as well)
Cons
way too much bureaucracy - too much “its not on my list”, and this year, a lot of fear around layoffs and constrained resources. product changes are slow. existing processes are inflexible. the company has carved work into so many little pieces that its hard to find any ownership. too many ex-consultants and ex-bankers in leadership - we need more operating expertise to run a company. much too focused on powerpoint decks instead of real bold action and experience.
Advice to Senior Management
stop changing things - its makes everyone dizzy! buyers, sellers, employees, etc, are just trying to earn a living and do good work. you make it really hard when policies, resources, fees, headcount keep changing.

Aug 21, 2008
3.0
Details
Career Opportunities 3.0
Communication 3.0
Compensation & Benefits 3.0
Employee Morale 3.0
Recognition & Feedback 2.0
Senior Leadership 2.5
Work/Life Balance 2.5
Fairness & Respect 3.0
No Opinion of CEO
“Decent place to work”
Product Manager in Campbell, CA (United States) Past Employee (2006)
Pros
Great projects to work on, with tons of users and lots of strategy behind what is built. ROI drives everything. You also get to work with great people who really know what they’re doing. Usually, people are nice and helpful. As with most places, there is the occasional jerk or sycophant but overall, the people are great. Benefits are also on par with most large companies in teh bay area. maybe a little low, but not much. I’d prefer working at eBay over Google for sure.
Cons
Too much work, too much expected of employees, not enough recognition given for the right things - probably the same at most large companies
Advice to Senior Management
Improve work/life balance

================================

Did you notice those CEO Approval ratings?

John J. Donahoe
President and CEO
31% “Approve”

Yahoo
Jerry Yang
40% “Approve”

Amazon
Jeff Bezos
68% “Approve”

Google
Eric E. Schmidt
87% “Approve”

I guess Donahoe is as popular with his employees as he is with his customers.

Since eBay shares hit another 52 week low yesterday
Day’s Range: 23.24 - 24.45
52wk Range: 23.24 - 40.73
Volume: 22,776,993
Avg Vol (3m): 15,025,90
Last Trade: 23.77
Trade Time: Sep 5, 2008

So it appears eBay shareholders are not thrilled with Donahoe and his management team either. Just take a look at Yahoo Finance Forum for eBay - it if full of unhappy shareholders, eBay sellers and scammed buyers complaining about eBay’s mediocre management.

============
Update 9/24/2008
Now that the eBay PR plants washed away under real posts, just a quick pulse check to see how eBay employees continue to feel about their employer. I see the CEO’s rating went down from 30 plus % down to 28% since we found the site where employees get to rate their employer and CEO less than a month ago.

1 - 10 of 129 Reviews for eBay

*

Sep 9, 2008

7 found helpful
“Why is management trying to kill the golden goose?…”
Software QA Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States)
*

Sep 8, 2008

7 found helpful
“One eBay insider’s point of view…”
Program Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)
*

Sep 12, 2008

6 found helpful | 1 comment
“Nearly 5 years there - what was I thinking…”
Senior Staff Software Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States)
*

Sep 11, 2008

5 found helpful
“Horrible for engineers.…”
Senior Software Engineer in Campbell, CA (United States)
*

Aug 22, 2008

7 found helpful
“eBay attracts a lot of great people, then the company culture beats them down and they leave within a couple of years.…”
Senior Product Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)
*

Sep 19, 2008

4 found helpful
“Great company, great purpose, no leadership, no willingness to admit mistakes…”
Senior Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)
*

Sep 21, 2008

3 found helpful
“Ebay needs to get back to what made it great, being a unique force in the online marketplace.…”
Independent in San Jose, CA (United States)
*

Sep 8, 2008

4 found helpful
“John J. Donahoe does NOT know how to run a company!…”
Software Engineer in San Jose, CA (United States)
*

Sep 16, 2008

3 found helpful
“ebay - not what it used to be!…”
Senior Director in San Jose, CA (United States)
*

Sep 10, 2008

4 found helpful
“Used to be a good place to work….…”
Program Manager in San Jose, CA (United States)

June 13, 2008

PayPal & eBay unsafe: Leo Raporte warns his 2 million listeners

For those who don’t know, Leo Leporte has over 2 million listeners on his podcast TWiT, and his weekend radio show (KFI-AM) in Los Angeles which is also podcasted.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leo_Laporte

You can listen to this MP3 broadcast snipped from Leo’s show (4.6 Megs)
where Leo Raporte and Dick DeBartolo account how they were scammed on eBay. They both used PayPal to pay for transaction and lost their money because in reality, PayPal protection was non existent. Listen to the podcast, it’s about 10 minutes long and will open your eyes and hopefully raise your caution when considering buying on eBay :

Click here to listen to the PodCast by Leo Raporte and Dick DeBartolo

After getting burned twice, this time for $2,200:

“eBay doesn’t seem to do very much to prevent [scammers] or discourage [scammers].”

“We’re not protected…[regarding Paypal]“.

“I will never buy anything on eBay ever again….and I going to go on my radio show on a regular basis and tell everybody that.”

Source: See show 588, about 1/2 way down the podcast.
http://twit.tv/dgw588 (Our recording starts at 7th minute of the original PodCast)

June 3, 2008

eBay Auctions - dwindling away

Remember Bruce Hershenson of eMoviePoster.Com? Bruce was one of eBay Super Power Sellers who announced after eBay’s infamous site improvements that after he sold 300,000 items on eBay he is quitting eBay completely. Unfortunately he announced it on eBay Seller forums and eBay “accidentally” deleted that very busy thread, so it was preserved on our site as one of the original eBay censorship stories. Whal could be eBay’s motivation deleting Bruce’s post on eBay’s Seller Central, other than censorship?

Business Week just did a good interview with Bruce, titled Auctions on eBay: A Dying Breed As consumers opt for fixed-price purchases, what happens to the company that perfected the art of online bidding—and the scores of e-auctioneers?

Another article worth reading is Was eBay a fad? by RoughType:
June 03, 2008
We already know that the famously cute story of eBay’s origin - founder Pierre Omidyar launched the site to help his fiancee trade the PEZ dispensers she collected - was a lie cooked up by a PR operative. We also know that the company’s vaunted “reputation system” - the foundation of what has long been perceived as a radically new kind of self-organizing and self-policing commercial community - has been crumbling….

June 2, 2008

eBay censoring forums again

I had to bring that lipstick on a pig picture in again. eBay has just been exposed trying to hide / delete / censor the ugly fallout from it’s new feeback policy.

eBay is full of scammers. eBay has been full of scammers. eBay is a scammer paradise. eBay tries their damnest to deny this and hide the truth about scams on it’s own site, instead of working to eliminate those scams.

In the traditional spirit of trying to hide the scams and scam artists on eBay site, misleading unsuspecting users to that false feeling of eBay being safe, once again, eBay deleted evidence of the new eBay feedback policy changes being immediately adopted by eBay scammers to abuse eBay members.

While eBay focuses it’s efforts on covering up scams on eBay and PayPal sites EBAY shares dropped 2.33% in a single day down to $29.31 by close of market June 2, 2008.

If eBay censors YOU on eBay message Boards, I recommend you take a look at the Yahoo Message FORUM for eBAY stock, perhaps eBay censors can silence you on eBay forums, but you can still present your story to eBAY shareholders, so they are not kept in dark.
visit eBay FINANCE FORUM ON YAHOO We know eBay does not listen to it’s customers, BUT eBay does listen to it’s shareholders.

So what is this all about? Stay with me for a minute.

eBay feedback changes: eBay no longer allows eBay sellers to leave negative or neutral feedback for buyers. eBay sellers are screaming bloody murder because they know eBay is full of con artists or nutso buyers who will abuse this and try to extort financial gain from the sellers threatening unjustified negative feedback, leaving just plain crazy malicious eBay feedback, destroying business reputations on a whim.

Yesterday AuctionBytes brought published article on eBay’s new feedback policy being abused by scam artist to extort money from eBay sellers. A link to the eBay seller discussion forum is provided from the AuctionBytes article.

Sure enough, eBay deleted the whole discussion. If you try to reach the link pointed to by AuctionBytes Article Sopranos Meets eBay in Feedback Extortion Scheme
The other case involves a feedback extortion ring that looks like an eBay version of the Sopranos. An eBay seller posting on the eBay discussion boards published correspondence he said he received from the winner of one of his auctions. The buyer reportedly said he and four other eBay users “are in the business of selling Positive Feedbacks to eBay Sellers for $20 each, totaling $100 for 5 Positive Feedbacks. If you purchase the 5 Positive Feedbacks for $100, you not only get to sell your items, you also receive 5 Positive Feedbacks. As you well know, Feedback is EVERYTHING to an eBay seller on whether they are successful or not. I’m sure that you want to remain successful in your eBay business. Plus, along with the 5 Positive Feedbacks, we will also Guarantee Never to contact you again and we take you off of our list.”

This article links to:
http://forums.ebay.com/db2/thread.jspa?threadID=1000711130&tstart=0&mod=1212267983950 and if you click on that link…. YOU GUESSED IT! IT WAS DELETED BY EBAY
Instead of that eBay discussion, you will see a message:
This discussion thread has been removed for one of the following reasons:
-the initial post in the thread was in violation of our Board Usage Policy.
-the member that started the thread has requested that it be removed.
-the thread expired due to inactivity

eBay routinely censors “uncomfortable” truths from it’s forums. Thus we even have a specific section here, ebay censorship, dedicated to what never existed on eBay… or at least what eBay claims never existed or was removed by a glitch, mistake or an oooopsie!

Now let’s see, we know the member did not ask for their message board thread to be removed. So that’s out. Next: we could not find anything in the initial post to be against eBay Board Usage Policy - and the thread certainly did not expire due to inactivity… the comments kept pouring in, there were over 400 when eBay censor decided to pull the plug. So what was it?

Again, it must be accidental, as the current eBay spokesperson put it describing previous eBay Discussion Board deletions:

suggested that forum posts critical of eBay’s policies had been deleted. EBay denied that any forum deletions were intentional. If any posts were taken down “it was accidental,” the spokesman said. “We’re not afraid of hearing from our community and allowing them to post and discuss things and be angry on our boards”

Here is a page one of the DELETED EBAY DISCUSSION, certainly no rule breaking there, IT’S JUST YOUR USUAL COVER UP BY EBAY, TRYING TO HIDE SCAMS AND PROTECT SCAM ARTISTS ON IT’S SITE:

Discussion Post a reply | Print
Sellers, I just got the following email:
in**anaftw (9 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:01 PDT
Listen very carefully. I am the winner of this item. I have 4 other eBay Users in place either bidding on or have won items from you plus myself totaling 5. We are prepared to leave you 5 Positive Feedbacks or 5 Negative Feedbacks depending on your actions. In a nutshell, we are in the business of selling Positive Feedbacks to eBay Sellers for $20 each, totaling $100 for 5 Positive Feedbacks. If you purchase the 5 Positive Feedbacks for $100, you not only get to sell your items, you also receive 5 Positive Feedbacks. As you well know, Feedback is EVERYTHING to an eBay seller on whether they are successful or not. I’m sure that you want to remain successful in your eBay business. Plus, along with the 5 Positive Feedbacks, we will also Guarantee Never to contact you again and we take you off of our list. You’ll even get a receipt for your purchase. Now, here’s the important part. If you refuse to purchase the 5 Positive Feedbacks, we will leave you 5 Negative Feedbacks for starters. We have 100’s & 100’s of eBay Users in place that we can use to leave feedbacks. In fact, we have enough to consistently leave you Negative Feedbacks for months resulting in you having to shut down your business. The absolute worst thing that you can do at this point is to try and contact eBay at any time about this or refuse to cooperate; we Will start leaving you Negative Feedbacks and shut your business down. Make no mistake, we’ve been doing this for years and have the power & resources to continually leave you Negative Feedbacks resulting in the closing of your business. Think about this, if you try to report us to eBay and they try and suspend our account or something like that, it will not stop us whatsoever. Remember, I said we have 100’s if not 1,000’s of eBay Users in place that we can use to leave you Negative Feedbacks over & over again until you are forced to shut your business down that you worked so hard to build up. Even if eBay were to keep suspending our user accounts, we have plenty more that we can use to keep leaving you Negative Feedbacks and there’s No way that eBay can keep up and stop us. They have tried & failed miserably. They also know about what we do. So the best and smartest thing that you can do is protect your business and just purchase the 5 Positive Feedbacks from us. That way, it’s done and over with and you can successfully continue to run your business without ever hearing from us again. We will give you up to 72 hours from now, to reply. The sooner, the better of course. Just send us an email stating that you want to purchase the 5 Positive Feedbacks from us and let us know your main email that you use so we can contact you. If we don’t hear from you by the end of the 72 hours, we will assume that you are refusing to cooperate and we will start leaving you Negative Feedbacks. So don’t do anything stupid. The smartest thing that you can do is take this seriously, we know what we’re doing. After we hear your reply to this email, we will contact you with further instructions.

The buyer is in fact the person who won my auction.

So… what would you do?
Previous 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 … 11 Next See last post
421 replies Date posted Reply #


tr**arn (44 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:03 PDT 1 of 421
Report the email and send it to Ebay for FB extortion.

19**jenn (15 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:03 PDT 2 of 421
Did this come through “my messages?” Yikes! I’d forward it to ebay.
Folks, hang onto your dashboards.
Here comes another speedbump!

tr**arn (44 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:03 PDT 3 of 421
What is the buyer’s ID so we can block them?

in**anaftw (9 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:04 PDT 4 of 421
A little more about me and the auction:
Sold for just over $100
I used featured plus (will I get that $9.95 back?)
I am a lowly bronze power seller with sales just under $2,000/month, so nothing that outstanding, but it’s a good chunk of my income.

The buyer has 3 feedback, all over 1 year old and from NARUs.
The name and email address that it came from match the name and email on the account that won the auction, so this doesn’t seem to be a hidden scam from someone who isn’t an ebay user.
I currently have 100% positive and a little over 500 total feedback in the past year.
I’ve been told to call PS support on Monday about this and have forwarded the email to ebay.

ch**t49 (91 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:06 PDT 5 of 421
so you have thier address? drive to thier house and burn it to the ground

ci**girlhardware (378 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:06 PDT 6 of 421
This sounds like it might be criminal.
http://www.ic3.gov/
from the site:
“The Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) is a partnership between the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the National White Collar Crime Center (NW3C), and the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA).”

pl**sedtameetcha (12 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:07 PDT 7 of 421
Scary.
LR

lo**postid (0 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:14 PDT 8 of 421
sounds like a “business protection” fee to me LOL.

I would love to get this email!
Have it tracked to the hometown, and have them arested for extortion.
Sure, the cops don’t care about feedback, but:
The absolute worst thing that you can do at this point is to try and contact eBay at any time about this or refuse to cooperate; we Will start leaving you Negative Feedbacks and shut your business down. Make no mistake, we’ve been doing this for years and have the power & resources to continually leave you Negative Feedbacks resulting in the closing of your business.
That is a personal threat! Notice they don’t specify what “business”, it could be an in home business or in town. This is a personal threat, and should be treated as such.

na**ybusinraleigh (2967 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:19 PDT 9 of 421
I would go to the media immediately, forget ebay, they’re slower than molasses in January in Alaska.
Print it out with full headers, a copy of the auction, a copy of the bidding history of that auction and all other pertinent paper trail and go to your local tv and newspapers with it.
I would also send it to the State AG’s office in the buyer’s state with a cover letter explaining factually (no emotion) how this came about.
Don’t let ebay bury this one.

mo**erof3wonderfulkids (0 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:19 PDT 10 of 421
Wow
He won your auction and instead of paying you for the widget he bought he wants YOU to pay him $100 to get 5 Positives? That means he is ready to bid on 4 more of your auctions?
BLOCK HIM.
Then report him to Ebay…and pull contact information. It’s probably not valid and that is one of the reasons you can get negs removed.
————————-
I’m offically on Strike-No listing and no buying until the Feedback Policy is Null and Void.

pu**e*couture (Private ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:20 PDT 11 of 421
It was only a matter of time………..
And eBay claims it was “worried about SECOND CHANCE OFFERS”

na**ybusinraleigh (2967 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:21 PDT 12 of 421
purse, don’t raise my blood pressure :) SCO scams my behind!

tu**eyjackson (324 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:23 PDT 13 of 421
We’ll see if the system works. If eBay does what they say they’ll do, this nut is out of luck.
As to the fee credit for featured plus, yes, as long as this was not a multiple item listing and you successfully file the UID.
I wouldn’t mind turning into a vermilion goldfish.

wi**ysgrandma (2341 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:23 PDT 14 of 421
Check your e-mail

pu**e*couture (Private ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:24 PDT 15 of 421
Seriously, I get chills……………..thinking about SCO “fraud” claims by eBay
I swear, I have bought AT LEAST 900-1,000 widgets *PER YEAR* on eBay, and have NEVER received a fraudulent SCO.
Can you say fraudulent FRAUD?

na**ybusinraleigh (2967 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:24 PDT 16 of 421
who are the other 4 referred to?
Come on, this is the system ebay created, let ebay handle this publicly and address how they will stop this nonsense now. Not one seller at a time.
It is extortion and it’s a chargeable offense.

co**ie10 (11166 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:25 PDT 17 of 421
I would go to the media immediately, forget ebay, they’re slower than molasses in January in Alaska.
That’s probably the dumbest thing you’ve said on this board.
OP - you HAVE to report it to Ebay. They are the only people who can shut down this looney.
By all means, send it to the media as well, but Ebay must be your first port of call.

ww**88 (Private ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:25 PDT 18 of 421
You need to report this to eBay as extortion. Pull the buyer’s contact info (email and phone) and call him and email him. If the phone and/or email is bogus, report to eBay (if bogus any feedback he gives will be deleted). His contact info will have his address. Call the police department in his city and file a report.

ai**rushayatollah (198 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:26 PDT 19 of 421
They will block the one ID, then the seller will get negs and NPB’s out the wazoo.
I actually wouldn’t go through FeeBay because if they take any kind of action at all the police may not have to get involved.

ho**luludance (32 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:26 PDT 20 of 421
Post this on Trust and Safety.
Does Powerseller support function over the weekend?
I’d call Live Help.
File the extortion report.
I wouldn’t answer them at all.

ai**rushayatollah (198 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:26 PDT 21 of 421
Contact ISP though.

na**ybusinraleigh (2967 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:28 PDT 22 of 421
IF ebay had a track record of doing the right thing in a timely manner, I would use ebay.
Can anyone say they’ve got a good track record?
Go to the media, let the media know that the system ebay has set up is failing miserably.
Not only will this fool leave negative feedback, the seller will then have to go through all of ebay’s hoops to get it removed.
Who are the other 4? Are there 4 others? Talk about the perfect threat.

co**ie10 (11166 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:28 PDT 23 of 421
Shame you didn’t post with your real ID so that we could all see who this person is that won the auction.

na**ybusinraleigh (2967 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:29 PDT 24 of 421
cobbie, posting with a selling ID is a good way for people to mess with your auctions, don’t you think the OP has had enough of that already?

pl**t1here2 (Private ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:29 PDT 25 of 421
Send me their address.
If they’re close enough, I’d like to have face to face, um, chat with them, :)

ai**rushayatollah (198 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:29 PDT 26 of 421
A cheerleader.

ho**luludance (32 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:30 PDT 27 of 421
Shame you didn’t post with your real ID so that we could all see who this person is that won the auction.
Oh, yes, and then some numnut here will bring the buyer to this thread and all hell breaks loose.
Nancy, I appreciate your sentiment about eBay, but eBay DOES shut down people like this. The advice given here has to be what’s best for the OP, not what will embarrass eBay the most.

tr**arn (44 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:31 PDT 28 of 421
This is one example of when a seller should post with their selling ID. Without it we can’t block or help report this scary buyer. What if this buyer is trying this scam on multiple sellers. The OP should warn them.

lo**postid (0 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:31 PDT 29 of 421
After we hear your reply to this email, we will contact you with further instructions.
That was a mistake on their part. Respond to it and see what the ‘further instructions’ are! Maybe it’ll be a better way to get info on this guy.
Try telling him you need his account info so you can transfer the $100 to him directly. And you don’t trust paypal for this transaction.

lo**postid (0 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:32 PDT 30 of 421
Join him in his game, but make sure he never actually gets any money from you

pl**t1here2 (Private ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:33 PDT 31 of 421
Not sure if it was mentioned, but don’t worry about possible negs, Ebay most likely will do away with any you get from this.

ca**mom3boys (924 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:34 PDT 32 of 421
Please post the auction number.

na**ybusinraleigh (2967 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:34 PDT 33 of 421
Honolulu, if you think hiding this ‘in house’ with ebay is the solution, fine.
I don’t. This is out of control garbage and those who want to stay and sell are getting all kinds of ridiculous feedback (because a buyer can with impunity ) and then this kind of cr@p?
And since the policies have changed, get an eyefull and see what people are teaching others to do to sellers on ebay, just google it and you’ll be shocked.
The plans are being formulated and some will take it to the extreme we see here.
Unless someone is prosecuted or publicly shamed, it will not stop.

tr**arn (44 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:34 PDT 34 of 421
Lulu, I didn’t think about someone tattling to the buyer. There are some that would do just that. :(

pl**t1here2 (Private ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:35 PDT 35 of 421
These people need to be jailed.

na**ybusinraleigh (2967 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:35 PDT 36 of 421
Furthermore, will ebay block this buyer from registering again? How?

ai**rushayatollah (198 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:35 PDT 37 of 421
Wall Street Journal.

my**gbokali (256 ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:36 PDT 38 of 421
This is BS OP….report to ebay, call the police, scream it on the hilltops…I wouild tell everyone you can. YOU CANNOT LET THEM DO THIS TO YOU…..no matter what they say.
DO NOT GIVE IN….please. I wish I could help you personaly cause this is just down right wrong not to mention has to be against the law.
and its EBays fault. Sorry, just my opinion.

mi**yteoil (Private ) View Listings | Report May-31-08 14:37 PDT 39 of 421
You really need to report this guy under multiple reporting functions through ebay. Maybe forward it to the higher ups at eBay also. They really should see what has been created with their new fb policy.
I also agree that it is a shame that we don’t know the id of this person.
Does he have a lot of fb?

Page 1 of 11 Go to page
Previous 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 … 11

and a screenshot of page 1 of 11 of the Censored / Deleted eBay forum from the Google Cache

How much do you wanna bet eBay will request Google to delete the cache???

May 18, 2008

Warning! PayPal SSL page vulnerability.

Filed under: Blogroll, PayPal, Phishing, Selling on eBay, eBay Censorhip, eBay Security — admin @ 6:11 am

I thought when CA Security Advisor reported PayPal XSS page vulnerability in Feburary of this year, PayPal assured the writer this phishing hole was closed. See the full article: PayPal Closes a Phishing Vulnerability Published Feb 17 2008, 10:44 AM by Stefan Berteau. Was that just a lip service by PayPal?

A new article, different researcher shows the same vulnerability here in yesterday’s report:

A serious scripting error has been discovered on PayPal that could enable attackers to create convincing spoof pages that steal users’ authentication credentials.

The cross-site scripting bug is made all the more critical because it resides on a page that uses an extended validation secure sockets layer certificate. The new-fangled SSL mechanism is designed to give users a higher degree of confidence that the page they’re visiting is secure by turning their browser address bar green.

But Finnish researcher Harry Sintonen figured out a way to inject his own code into a supposedly protected PayPal page even as the green bar lulled visitors into believing it hadn’t been tampered with. Sintonen’s code simply caused an Internet Explorer alert window to open with the words “Is it safe?” as evidenced by the screenshot …..

Full Article with the screenshot of the vulnerability has been published on ChannelRegister.Co.Uk ‘Secure’ PayPal page is… you guessed it by Dan Goodin in San Francisco
16 May 2008 20:57

PayPal’s site is silent about this vulnerability… I guess the “hide your head in the sand” approach or “if you do not admit to ut, it’s not there” speaks volumes about how concerned PayPal really is about safety of their users.

PayPal is no stranger to security vulnerabilities:

April 19, 2008

eBay damage control - eBayEstimator went poof!

Filed under: Selling on eBay, To eBay or Not To Ebay, eBay Censorhip — admin @ 7:55 am

I see another brilliant move by eBay management took place. Last week blogs buzzed about the shortcomings of the now default of eBay’s Best Match. I also chipped in with my opinion on eBay’s Best Match which rewards auction listing title spamming. All the critics pointed to a useful tool eBay Estimator to illustrate the case how repeat keywords increase listing visibility on Best Match.

In response to the critique, eBay pulled the eBayEstimator tool.

Somehow, reading the page eBay Estimator created by eBay labs:

  • The eBay developers state: Unfortunately, we have been asked to pull this tool down. However, if you found it useful and want it back, please log your request here: (Every request counts!)
    [Note: Comments can still be posted, but they will no longer appear in the list on the right]
    [Update: Please check back on Monday 04/21/2008 for status information about this tool]
    This seems as though the developers are not very happy about their own management decision to pull this tool and are looking for support from eBay members in form of feedback right on that page to make their case with the management types who decided to shoot the messenger instead of fixing what’s broken.

  • And feedback they got. They stopped publishing comments on this page at 262… so any new comments do not show. For archival purposes and for your reading enjoyment, here is a link to the screenshot of the current comments by the sellers using this tool and requesting it back.
    My guess is that even the first 262 comments currently published there will dissappear because: a) the tool may be revived based on the popular demand… but don’t hold your breath on this one… b) the same management type at eBay who ordered this tool to go poof will get paranoid about all those criticisms voiced on that page and will order these comments to get “accidentaly” deleted.

One thing is typical. There is someone in eBay management in charge of the damage control who makes these silly decisions to censor out those uncomfortable truths about the company shortcomings and they do it in a worst way possible, case and point is this example. If eBay Best Match Algo does not work well and can be gamed, let’s pull down the tool that exposes it instead of fixing what’s broken. Kill the messenger.

This makes eBay look so yesterday I bet this censorizing decision maker in eBay management is one of the grandfathered perennials who are directly responsible for contributing to stifling eBay company growth by keeping it in the mentality of 20th century.

Let the younger, Google style KIDS take over at eBay. Let them roll and keep this tool so they can get a good feedback to improve the Best Match Algo. Good feedback does not mean “great, wonderful eBay”, good feedback comes in all forms, such as “Hey, look, your Best Match can be gamed, and this is how” … so the programmers on your team can IMPROVE the Best Match.

Update April 21, 2008 : Good news, the eBayEstimator is back in a morphed way, better and smarter and soliciting feedback. Checkout this link on how you can improve your listing title on eBay. This one is also cool, it warns you against spamming eBay titles.. Here you also have the feedback page, where user comments continue to be published. Wow, there may be some hope for eBay! It appears that the comments were published sequentially and uncensored, I have sent this comment, and it is published there: “Fix the Best Match, it’s not this tool’s fault that Best Match is broken. This tool is helpful, bring it back”.

Good job eBay!

March 31, 2008

Give a Negative Feedback on eBay - Receive a Coupon

Filed under: Blogroll, eBay Censorhip, eBay Sex Lies n Videotape — admin @ 7:15 am

AuctionBytes reported this new incentive eBay is giving to unhappy Buyers. eBay made another brilliant decision: if a buyer complains or gives low ratings to a seller, give ‘em a discount coupon. While the intentions of eBay management may be good, the fallout danger of abuse by dishonest buyers is worth considering. If an unscrupulous buyer knows that eBay will send them a coupon worth of $100 or $200 or more just because they gave a seller negative rating or low DSR ratings, some buyers may abuse this and give undeserved ratings to sellers in hopes of obtaining such coupon.

Check out the original article on AuctionBytes eBay Gives Buyers an Incentive to Complain

And, oh, btw.. did you notice that the first link in the AuctionBytes article linking the original post on eBay forums was already deleted by eBay censors? We get the famous The specified topic [2000539507] was not found. Perhaps another ACCIDENT BY EBAY CENSORS.

eBay censorship reminds me of China Censoring Tibet News

March 9, 2008

Oooops, another eBay forum post censored accident

Filed under: eBay Censorhip, eBay Sex Lies n Videotape — admin @ 11:44 am

eBay management puttin’ lipstick on a pig

feel free to download and use this image

just right click on it and save to your computer

As highlighted in the past post here, eBay spokesman said regarding censored eBay forum posts on the subject eBay padding their listings: A comment on a Tuesday Appscout post suggested that forum posts critical of eBay’s policies had been deleted.EBay denied that any forum deletions were intentional. If any posts were taken down “it was accidental,” the spokesman said. “We’re not afraid of hearing from our community and allowing them to post and discuss things and be angry on our boards”

Ebay must be having another case of accidentitis on their forums as more and more critical posts are dissappearing.

This post from one of eBays largest powersellers titled

I have sold 300,000 eBay items but am quitting completely!

is now deleted by eBay censors: here is a link to the original post:

http://forums.ebay.com/db2/thread.jspa?threadID=2000529608&tstart=0&mod=1204856790666

if you click on it, you will get : The specified topic [2000529608] was not found.

My guess would be eBay is totally paranoid about seller exodus and when one of the largest power sellers calls it quits and announces it on eBay’s own Seller Discussion Forum, someone is shaking in their booties, thinking this might encourage other sellers to move away. So deleting the post and pretending it never happened is the eBay way! I am sure this incident will never make it to the mainstream media and if it does, it will be declared another accident/test/glitch.

Again, Google is our friend and we have screenshots of the censored out post that eBay deleted by accident, check out what eBay did not want you to see.

screenshot of I have sold 300,000 eBay items but am quitting completely! deleted thread by eBay censors

March 2, 2008

eBay censoring info about padded listings on it’s forums

Filed under: eBay Censorhip — admin @ 4:01 pm

While writing yesterday’s post, the YouTube video capturing eBay censorship at it’s finest piqued my interest.

If the hundreds of thousands listings you cannot Buy Now or Bid on on eBay site are just an innocent mistake / glitch or have a legitimate reason to be there, why would eBay moderators be so diligent in removing posts from their forums discussing these? Although the eBay forum thread has been removed by eBay Moderators, Google cache still has some of the posts so we have taken screen shots of those and saved them here - anyone is welcome to them.

Here is a link to the Forum Post that was deleted by eBay censors.

Here are links to screenshots of the forum pages that were deleted… thanks to Google Cache….  Click on the smaller thumbnails to see full size screenshots of the forum posts, so you can read what eBay did not want you to see ;-)

P1 of deleted forum

P2 of deleted forum

P3 of deleted forum

P4 of deleted forum

P5 of deleted forum

P6 of deleted forum

P7 of deleted forum

P9 of deleted forum

P17 of deleted forum

P18 of deleted forum

March 22, 2007

eBay Censorhip

Filed under: eBay Censorhip — admin @ 11:37 am

According to eBay this eBay beware-of-fraud About Me page is a severe violation of eBay policy and was removed today. Here is an archive of what the about ME page looked like at the time of removal. eBay did not like linking to fraudulent auctions on it’s own site. Sounds like censorship at it’s finest.