![]() ![]() Here's the wording from eBay in their email to me indicating the buyer wanted a return. It was a 20 year old iPod in the original box - it was amazing that it worked at all and naturally it was advertised as being as-is, no guarantees etc. ![]() However, eBay still offers buyer protection and doesn't care what the auction says or settings might be. I don't know how it works.ĭid you set the item as not allowing returns when you listed it?Īlso, if something stops working 18 days after being received and you DID say you allow returns, that's a perfectly valid request that you shoudl have been on the hook for.ġ00% sold as-is, no returns or refunds. Have they ever or do you think they would transfer your "debt" to collections and **** up your credit rating? Is that even possible as a seller? Just asking. NEVER sell anything on eBay and frankly just buy your stuff elsewhere. Long story short, I quickly disconnected all my credit card/bank info from eBay, left them hanging with the USD$550 and am now persona non grata with them. They even suggested (really) that I refund the money and let them keep the item like I'm some Amazon seller shipping junky iPhone cables. ![]() You literally cannot sell anything in 'as-is non-working' condition, and the buyer can run an iPod through a washing machine if they want for 3 weeks and then file a refund claim.ĮBay honoured his request, refunded him the money instantly and then came after me for the money. It was working when he received it, and 18 days later it stops working. The reason for his request? It no longer worked. After being an eBay member for 20 years with 700+ feedback, I finally quit them when I sold a vintage, non-working 1st gen iPod for USD$550 and nearly 3 weeks after receiving it the buyer decided he didn't want it and filed for a return. EBay blows chunks, especially for sellers. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |