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Old 09-02-2023, 02:34 PM
gunboat82 gunboat82 is offline
Mike Henry
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Join Date: Apr 2023
Location: Massachusetts
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gunboat82 View Post
Only tangentially related, but I'm not impressed with the Authenticity Guarantee process in general. I recently sold an SGC-graded Mantle. My seller page showed that the card passed authentication (as expected) and was shipped to the buyer.

Soon after, I get an e-mail from the buyer indicating that the card arrived with a note that it couldn't be authenticated because it was miscategorized. It was not. The listing showed that it was properly categorized as a baseball trading card, with the correct year, player, grader, etc.

I contacted eBay customer service, which indicated that their system showed that the card passed authentication and there was no note from the authenticator. After digging deeper, eBay eventually acknowledged that the buyer had received a notification that the item couldn't be authenticated because it was miscategorized. They also acknowledged that it wasn't actually miscategorized, so the buyer never should have received that note.

I offered the buyer a refund and sent him the eBay chat transcripts, and he ultimately decided to keep the card. However, it was a huge hassle, eBay provided conflicting responses, and their customer service rep couldn't provide any other explanation for the hitch in the authentication process, other than to apologize and say "don't worry, we've got your back." Even with that apology, I couldn't get eBay to provide assurances that the shipping cost would be refunded if the buyer accepted my return offer.
Well, I can certainly see why the buyer didn't accept my return offer. It appears that eBay refunded him half the cost of the item on its own dime, so he got an SGC 3.5 1956 Topps White Back Mantle for $720, all because eBay shipped it without authenticating it.

If I'm a buyer, I'd gladly accept "unauthenticated" SGC slabs for 50% off.
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