Did you ever notice that he failed to say he would file an insurance claim at any point in time?
And what business is that of yours? The insurance covers the shipper and is for the shipper, not the buyer (although this should really be the otherway 'round). Do you know for a fact that he/she wasn't going to file a claim?
Actually, it's a LOT of my business. It's my business because I PAID FOR IT. Actually, according to both eBay, Paypal and a LOT of sellers, it is more for the buyer than the seller. Considering the fact that he didn't even say anything about it, even at the end, no I don't think they would have at all. They knew it wasn't due to their packing job, so he wouldn't have been able to pull that stunt, and he knew it - if he didn't, he would have learned real quick.
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He would have obviously lost anyway, after the postal service would have seen his packing job.
Irrelevant. You're not the qualified person at the post office making the call. Nor is it relevant to your argument.
Irrelevant to what? The fact that he charged me $30 on shipping, when he didn't pack it like he should have? Do you think I am new to packing? I have been selling stuff on eBay and elsewhere for almost a decade now. I have had to file a few claims, and had other people file them as well. I know what the post office looks for. Same goes with FedEx. If you don't have your item packed correctly, it does not matter how much insurance you purchase; they reject your claim.
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You trusted him enough to receive your $30, didn't you? If he's such the jerk and untrustworthy person, then why did he give you the $30?
Yeah...and if he hadn't I would have been filing a Paypal claim. Plain and simple. He corrected the problem; just about anyone can correct problems, and make right on most situations.
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It's funny, you think you're in the 100% right and he's in the wrong. Yet you don't know anything about this person and make lots of assumptions, though.
I think the only assumptions I made are ones that were well founded by myself and other members here and given the circumstances of the whole situation, my leniency and everything else I was looking past, and then I'm the one getting shafted here on the condition? Why don't you open up your own bank or credit card company with those same ethics...you won't be in business long.
You know what I know for fact though? He put this up on eBay, sold it as MINT and COMPLETE, and it wasn't. End of story. Let me sell you something and say it's MINT and COMPLETE, and then send you something like what I got; your attitude would change big time. Oh wait, I don't do stuff like that by lying about the condition of items, so you can stop thinking about it now.
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There are a lot of members and people in general that get/got burnt from ebay. Your recent transaction was not one of them.
That's right, I didn't; because I don't sit down and be passive about situations when I purchase items, and let it slide that I got less than what was described. Kinda funny that you keep on forgetting that. Once I receive an item in the mail in 'not the condition stated' - I have ever right at that point to make sure I am happy and that I am getting what I paid for. This includes filing with Paypal or attempting to make a deal with them to get the item repaired. Anyone that disagrees, well they can just go deal with Red Frog, because it is just the same as taking a gamble with them if I don't do something about it.
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No,I simply think your logic is flawed and you are missing our point,as your stating that the scammer/liar/problematic feedback seller is the trust worthy member on ebay to be relied upon for a full refund after he gets the goods back,and the buyer with 100 percent feedback is the possible scammer out to make a fast buck and not just actually expect to be able to resolve any kind of issues.....Seriously Mal,are you high tonite???
Haha, a 97% is a dead give away on a persons credibility? News flash Mike: there are people in this world that are jerks, anal retentive drama queens, pissants, and what not that allowed to leave whatever feed back they want. People are quick to jump to conclusions and make quickdraw assumptions, because you know - it's there god given right. Every argument/conflict has two sides, the truth lays somewhere in between. I take it you've never been ripped off by someone who's has 100% feedback? Ignorance is bliss.
Actually, you know what, I have been ATTEMPTED to be ripped off by someone with 100% feedback. It's all the same. What you are saying is that you should basically just ignore their feedback %...I think not. If someone has low feedback percentage, or several negatives, obviously the percentage of you getting ripped off or not getting your item in the same condition as stated (the 2 go hand in hand), reflects that. If you don't see the correlation there, then your logic is definitely flawed.
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To no one specific: I'm not arguing for the seller. I'm arguing that the sellers point of view, opinion, and experience isn't projected here or unknown or represented in any way here. Yet it's already determined the guy is scum because tried to offer a refund at the first email/complaint and that his promise of a refund was an obvious attempt to get back those goods without refunding the buyer. Eventually he gave the buyer the partial refund he wanted. Pfft.. that f*cker.
I think his 'point of view, opinion, and experience' was VERY WELL represented here...
BY HIS EMAILS. I didn't modify them, or stuff words in his mouth. Just like I never kept anyone from out bidding me.
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Did you ever notice that he failed to say he would file an insurance claim at any point in time? He got insurance on it. If it was broken in transit (which it wasn't) then he would have been able to easily file on it. He would have obviously lost anyway, after the postal service would have seen his packing job.
Your initial message to the seller stated that the packaging wasn't damaged in any way, so why would he offer to file a claim?
Good point, but the thing is anyone that knows an item was working before they sent it off, would know to file if they knew it was not from a result of their packing or how the item was before hand.
My initial thought if someone said something I sold was not 100% working, would be to ask about the box or packaging I shipped the item in. If the packaging was not damaged, I would then look at what type of item it was. If it was me, and I shipped this as actually being in the condition it was stated as, and the laser showed up not working after, I would be damn sure filing a claim.
To put it bluntly here: Lasers don't die partially and act like they have been run for several hundred hours due to poor package handling at the post office.