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Worthpoint removes 30 million sports card listings
Cross posting this from Blowout.
https://www.blowoutforums.com/showthread.php?t=1443853 The lead-in but won't duplicate the complete post here: n Monday morning (February 1, 2021) it was identified that all eBay sports card sales were removed from being searched on Worthpoint.com. Although the archive of listings still exists, as previously existing links to Worthpoint listings can still be accessed successfully, there is no longer any way to search for sports cards sold via eBay on Worthpoint. The only exception is cards that were listed in an incorrect category on eBay or items that are so old (circa 2011 or earlier) that the listed category of the item on Worthpoint is "Unknown". All sports and trading card related categories were totally wiped on Monday. Archive.org indicates that there were circa 63,000,000 listings in the "Sports" category on Worthpoint as of January 26, 2021. Today that number is approximately 33,000,000. These 33 million listings are solely composed of autographs, jerseys, memorabilia, tickets, bobbleheads, etc. Multiple correspondences with Worthpoint, including the one pictured below, indicate that the purging of sports card listings is part of a "normal optimization process". The message also indicates that 180,000 sales results still remain, meaning that Worthpoint removed 99.4% of their sports cards listings. |
Wow! What’s the rationale? Or what’s the running theory about why these were removed?
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I hate that site
Every time I go there I have found something I have sold . What ripoff !
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Ebay does also license their data and if Worthpoint found some way around that license then EBay has the right to remove that data.
Rich |
I highly recommend others calling and/or emailing Worthpoint as I just did. I have always considered buying a subscription as a lot of my research ends at their paywall, but if they are willing to erase so many results, I have no use for it.
The odd things is, the trimming scandal barely affects me as I do not collect graded cards (never bought one, nor have I ever had a card graded). It does bother me a lot though, and if there is a chance what Worthpoint did is related to the BODA work it should be a major story. Alan |
Very Suspicious......
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It would be great if someone could post this to CU. I would do it myself but I was banned lol.
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"Normal Optimization" LOL!!!
Your entire business is designed on providing data to your customers. You then redact a large percentage of that data? Nothing normal about that. There's a multitude of different reasons why they would do something like that. Without getting into possible conspiracies (which may or may not be valid), the most obvious would be some kind of a cost cutting measure. Cost of additional servers to archive that data. Cost of licensing to provide that data from Ebay or other sources. Cost of additional employees to corral, corroborate and archive that data, however they might be doing it. It would be nice if they were upfront about it one way or another. The fact they cloak it in a phrase like "Normal Optimization", is what makes people think their explanation is likely suspect. The idea of Worthpoint has always intrigued me. Been tempted to dip my toes past the paywall, but couldn't ever seem to justify the cost to myself. This pretty much settles it. |
Do you think that Worthpoint received a letter from a lawyer threatening legal action unless they took the listings down?
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I can't find the story right now but I read on OANN.com that Donald Trump bought worthpoint and in his initial briefing to their board pointed out that if they had fewer items in their database to search it would have the effect of optimizing the search process. Doug "insert smiley face here" Goodman |
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Nat Turner, the new part-owner of Collector's Universe, would be a better bogeyman for the tin foil hat crowd. Obviously with PSA's liability in their Grade Guarantee and Turner's ability to buy companies at whim, it would at least be a more plausible conspiracy theory.
The same type of data is available for free through Brent's PWCC Marketplace with a free login for sports cards, maybe not every single listing that Worthpoint had, but a lion's share of it I'd guess. It certainly seems bizarre that Worthpoint would go, "Man, we're getting a lot of people consistently searching for historical baseball cards and items! We should really clear them out!" Another possibility is that eBay itself restricted the data feed, or tried to strong arm Worthpoint to remove it so eBay could charge more for its historical data. We know they're restricting sites like watchcount and 130point to run as many queries as they usually do. Kind of reminds me of the VCP image quality "improvements" a couple of years ago where making lower fidelity images available was considered "optimization." Hopefully Worthpoint reverses their decision, because if PSA and PWCC are the only arbiters of historical images and pricing data, then the fox is guarding the henhouse again. |
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That's completely ridiculous! Why leave all of the memorabilia, autographs, photos, jerseys, tickets, bobbleheads, and everything else in tact? The fact that it's just sportscards says a lot about who instigated this. This decision is completely void of any logic, and wreaks of corruption (just when you thought you'd seen it all in this sleazy hobby). :mad: |
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I'm crushed |
Maybe the FBI folks running the trimming scandal can make a phone call and ask?
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Edit: Whoops saw this info was already given earlier in the thread. My bad. Still recommend these for your price research.
If you’re looking for something to fill the gap, PWCC has a free database of sold listings going back to like 2008ish and of course VCP is the best for tracking graded sales. (I have no part in either of these, just putting the info out there for people that don’t know) |
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I will vouch the moderator is a good guy, we've known each other for at least a decade and I finally met him at either the 2017 or 2018 NSCC. However, being a good guy and having to follow corporate dictates are two very different things. Let's say his boss said your account has to go for that post, then he has no real option but to poof your account Rich |
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That comment is beneath you, this is baseball cards not something more serious. FYI my wife is the daughter of a survivor so I take all those references very seriously Rich |
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Rich |
I have to agree you can't blame someone who's paid to be a chat board moderator for doing his job. I'm sure he is told what posts to remove, and under what circumstances to ban a user. Is he supposed to have some moral objection to banning those that violate the rules? I would think not.
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I'm not sure I have ever posted on PSA's boards. As I understand it they're very quick to remove posts that could be viewed as against the company's best interests. That is just what I gather from posts around here though. I have never looked up their rules.
I also assume I would be banned had I spent any time posting there. |
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Rich |
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If an honest, pertinent and stimulating conversation violates company rules and results in banning, then who in their right mind would support such a company? Never Get Cheated. |
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If you figure 200 opinion givers, giving 1 opinion every 30 seconds, for 8 hours a day, for 5 days a week, then they are about a month from catching up... Doug "easy" Goodman |
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Then they better step it up.
30 seconds IS a bit slow I suppose. And if they hire another 100 "experts"... I've been unemployed for 335 days, not that I'm counting, so if they want to drop the most recent submissions by Dmitri Young by my place, I can whip those out in a couple seconds because I don't even have to see them to know they are 10s. Doug |
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I have a couple festival shows scheduled in September but I'm not holding my breath about confirmation that 50,000 people can attend happening before infrastructure costs cause them to "re-schedule". General consensus in the roadies with titles (tour managers, tour accountants, production managers) community is late, late, late, late summer at best. The good news is I have plenty of time to sort thru my stuff. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHPOzQzk9Qo Doug |
I think late spring early summer many people will be going out spending their disposable incomes on eating out, entertainment, and vacationing/traveling.
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The number of people employed by the average concert is far more than anybody thinks about. Doug PS - apologies to Peter for the accidental hijacking of his thread. |
... and all of the local bars and restaurants that surround these concert venues. Business owners, cooks, waiters, busboys, receptionists, food and beverage suppliers, and the list goes on.
Here in WA, you can't even go to a restaurant that has entertainment of any kind. You can cram hundreds of people into a Target, Wal Mart or Costco, but live entertainment is forbidden. You can't even have a single entertainer in a coffee house or restaurant.... despite the fact that they'd be performing 12-15 feet away, while the dining tables are spaced 6 feet apart. Double standards galore in the PNW. An actual live concert seems like a pipe dream at this point. Getting a hole in one used to be my lifetime goal. Now it's simply to attend one more real concert. At least we crammed in a few good shows just before the lockdowns were enacted. |
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What baffles me, at least in MA, is the constantly shifting guidance in response to minor changes in the statistics, and the seeming arbitrariness of the guidance. So it's OK to have 10 people in a meeting but not 15? How is that really helpful?
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If the federal government had done what many would consider to be it's job and instructed the states with specific policies, guided by the elements of the federal government whose specific training and jobs were meant to deal with medical situations of the kind we were (and still are) facing 10+ months ago instead of telling the states to pretty much "do what you think is best" for an issue that was clearly on a national (technically international) scale, we might be in a better position now. But, that didn't happen, so... here we are. It's all certainly well beyond my pay grade, and I assume those of everybody who will read this post. Doug "...but my friends in some other countries are doing pretty good..." Goodman |
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