It is not clear who you are "calling out." In my book I described this item as a "stunningly beautiful mirror," which it is. I never said nor represented this item to be a pinback. When I acquired this item it came with a pin, and I photographed it as such. When I consigned the item to REA, I made no representation to REA of it being a pinback. REA writes their own descriptions of items, not consignors. At some point in the item's history, I believe the mirror broke out and someone replaced it with a pin. Neither I nor REA altered the item.
On the subject of needing to "call out" someone, consider this case. A collector won a pinback on eBay. He was delighted to win it, and more delighted to actually received it. It seems a third party contacted the seller immediately after the auction was over and attempted to obtain the pinback by offering the seller more than the buyer's winning bid. Fortunately, the seller was honorable. Would you believe the exact same thing happened a few months later? Different seller, different buyer, same third party.
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