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I understand about breaking something out of a holder would void a guarantee and so on. I was thinking more of the person that wants to put the raw card in a binder, or do something else with it. Also, wasn't that card being listed by the seller in that same screwdown holder on Ebay? So does that mean you get your card locked into whatever holder the seller sends it to the authentication company with? So what if the holder has scratches or glue/tape on it, or it's not in a rigid holder? You as the buyer apparently have no say/choice in the matter of how you then want to protect and display the card, unless you're willing to throw away the authenticity guarantee. My point is for now it may be okay because you're not paying for the authentication service, but once someone does have to start paying for it, I would think they may want to be able to retain that authenticity guarantee they are paying for, and also use/display the raw card they're also paying for, as they wish. Or is it possibly a calculated and well thought out move on the part of Ebay to make it so most buyers will want to break/remove the authenticity guarantee tape/seals, and thereby let Ebay off the guarantee going forward? They offer the service for free now, to test it out and then hopefully build up acceptance and desire by everyone to want it. And then later on start charging for it, thereby creating another Ebay revenue stream, but knowing at the same time that a very large portion of those using the service will most likely void the guarantee upon receipt of the card(s) by the buyer, and their breaking the card(s) out of whatever holder the seller originally put it/them in. |
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Regardless, I am sincerely glad though that you were able to a good deal based off an inaccurate description. Since it's registered, I'm wondering what would happen with ebay if you tried to sell it as an authentic 1935 Diamond Star without voiding the seal. |
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MEANS: If it doesn’t pass our authentication — which basically means the card that was actually shipped was not, in our authenticator’s opinion, the card that was listed — it gets returned to the seller, and it’s a done deal. MEANS: We want buyers to get what they thought they were getting, we want sellers to feel confident that the buyer’s going to be happy with their purchase. At its simplest, it’s making sure that when someone buys a Kobe Bryant, they get a Kobe Bryant and they don’t accidentally get a LeBron. It prevents mistakes from happening, too, which are always frustrating. So, let's see: The card shipped is not the card listed, and the buyer who thinks they're buying a 1951 card gets a 1935 card instead. They can't even meet the most base level expectations of the service. What a joke. Source: https://www.sportingnews.com/us/mlb/...914xlepioy0s5v |
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So in your opinion, Ebay should have returned the card to the seller and refunded the buyer? You can just ask the buyer in this thread, if they actually thought they were getting a 1951 card. I HATE that I'm defending Ebay here but............. I think the spirit of the policy was fulfilled. I still think it's a stupid service that will eventually just turn into another cash grab for Ebay. |
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Don’t have an opinion on the service as I haven’t used it yet. Normally that’s how I treat my opinions on services. Except car washes. They are dumb. Wash your own car.... When I finally use the service I’ll provide an opinion if it’s warranted. If it’s not crazy awesome or crazy bad I probably won’t because the opinions of neutral people are boring.
The one opinion I can provide is that the fact there are near two full pages of responses of people calling the service a sham because a seller fat fingered his keyboard and mislabeled a card is idiotic. That’s my opinion. It was a legit card mislabeled. It was authentic, evidentially. Is it a cash grab? Yeah I don’t know. Will it fail spectacularly? Yes or no - one of those two or possibly maybe. Did it fail because it shipped a buyer an authentic card from a seller who has Arabic numeral dyslexia? No, that’s dumb. |
So what should have happened? The authenticator should have identified it as a 1934-36 Diamond Stars card, entered that into their database, and then contacted the buyer to see if that's what they wanted when they purchased the item. To declare it to be an authentic 1951 card, which it clearly is not, is against the mission of the authenticator. And they are making the assumption that the item is what the buyer intended to buy, by sending it through automatically. Because once it gets to the buyer, he cannot return it for not being authentic.
Another question is whether or not they removed it from the screwdown holder. Because the card may actually be skinned and both parts are shown. Without removing the card from the original holder, they can't readily make that determination, right? Maybe they can? But I doubt it. |
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I'm not asking about it having been labeled with the wrong year. Clearly, the Diamond Stars set was not produced in 1951. I'm asking if it's a counterfeit card. I was under the impression the card is genuine R327 Hank "Greenburg" (Greenberg). |
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The general public can usually be confidently relied on to be moronic. |
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The seller mailed the card on Monday. Today, I received the following email from eBay Hi Kris, Our authentication partner received your item from the seller but, unfortunately, it didn’t pass inspection. We assess items covered by Authenticity Guarantee against the highest standards, and reject items for a variety of reasons, including damaged packaging, missing accessories, not matching the seller’s description, or an inability to confirm authenticity. I also received a notice from PayPal stating I received a full refund. So, from the day the seller finally mailed the card, it only took 4 days (and most of that was USPS). The success of the program will be determined over the long term, but in this case, they certainly met expectations. |
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Kris,
Can you check regularly to see if eBay removes the seller from their site? Wondering if 1 or multiple fakes being passed as real finally gets eBay to ban these fraudsters. |
Will do. Unfortunately, he sold four other fake cards to other buyers for under $750 shortly after I explained the program to him. I’m sure it was just a coincidence that he priced them under $750, although the value of the same legitimate card is much higher. :rolleyes:
The good news is that he currently does not have any cards listed, just a few non-card items. |
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Thought this might be pertinent to add...
They literally didn't tape the box that they sent. Just closed lid with a label. Anyone along the way could have opened it. Luckily everything arrived in tact. |
I just saw on twitter that someone is claiming the new threshold is $500. If so, more cards to be done that way.
Rich |
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I just got a PM on eBay from eBay stating the threshold is now $500 for ungraded cards. No sign so far of them hitting my graded stuff.
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Ebay is slowly implementing this new "service", they will probably keep gradually lowering the $ amount and then implement their fee as people become used to the process. I don't believe there is a way to opt out, you will at one point be required to use the service on even lower dollar cards and pay for it....
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Shows picture of un-taped box. "You removed the tape from the box" Why would he lie about something as ambiguous as that? :confused: |
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https://pages.ebay.com/seller-center...es-update.html |
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....and the other shoe drops.......and that final value fee will also be charged for collecting shipping charges, sales taxes and VAT taxes. That ain't the end of it either. No way that's not going to include a "free" service of "authenticating" your cards, for very long. |
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It’s a price hike across the board, that makes what some might see as a smaller price hike, bigger then it seems, since they are taking a big portion of parts of the sale, that most sellers don’t make a penny on. You think that’s cool, well good for you. |
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There may be one loophole around this authenticity issue that the handwringers have not mentioned. Increase your postage. If you have an item that you would sell for $500 and ship for $10, raise the postage to $35 and sell for $475. Sure, the FVF will still be high, but you then avoid extra hands on the item and delays in getting it to the buyer. |
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My card was delivered to the Authenticater yesterday afternoon, got an email this morning saying the card was authenticated and mailed to the buyer. Less than 24 hours.
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Ebay earnings are out. It's getting blasted down $6 approx 12pct.
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eBay item # 165345513894 - maybe someone can add the actual EBay listing.
I bought this T205 Cobb today hoping that the authentication process works. The listing has the usual red flags; bad photos, seller doesn’t sell any vintage. But the color looks good and the Polar Bear staining is similar to other T205’s that I own. I asked the seller if he thinks it’s real, and he said it’s good - we will see. eBay already notified me it’s been sent to authenticator. What do the T205 experts think? Real or fake? |
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Brian |
I wouldn't bid on that card with those poor photos. Out-of-focus images of the back are pointless. However, the card is not an obvious fake and most reprints will be. Could be genuine.
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It could be real IMO based on the pics but I doubt it.
I would say you were astute to buy it under the new Ebay authentication standards. You can't be out anything and you may have won a card worth $10K for peanuts. I'm sure you will update us with the outcome. |
Looks fake to me, as described by Brian, it has the fake craquelure look to it. eBay may still okay it. My concern is the "swinging-sixties" scenario, where they keep the money and the card for over 18 months.
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it is probably fake
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Sold a card requiring their review. It was authenticated and mailed to buyer approximately 1 day from when they received. |
After about 10 days shipping to the authenticator (for the Cobb T205) , I received the following message:
"Our authentication partner received your item from the seller but, unfortunately it doesn't pass inspection. This happens when the item doesn't match the listing description or they are not able to confirm the authenticity of the item. We are refunding $666.82 back to your original payment method." The refund to PayPal was received just a few minutes later. I should note that the original listing stated that the seller does not accept returns. So at least in this case, EBay authentication over ruled the seller policy. Does anyone have an authentic Cobb T205 for sale at $666.82? |
Well the process seems to be working so far.
I have mostly raw cards in my collection and I have hope now that I may be able to sell them someday without the time and cost of sending to a grading company first. Wouldn't that be nice. Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk |
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