Am I a "fake" human being for pointing out a fake coin to an eBay seller?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by C-B-D, Apr 11, 2016.

  1. Stevearino

    Stevearino Well-Known Member

    @C-B-D, here it is:
    "Perhaps they were only trying to destroy the competition I was to them- that goes to them being liars- the other similar coins were trash. You too?"
    Luckily, I was able to resurrect it from the trash bin (but that is where it really belongs.

    Steve
     
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  3. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    ...and no sales in over a year. I suspect a hijacked account.
     
  4. C-B-D

    C-B-D Well-Known Member

    But nearly 400 buys in the past month!
     
  5. coinzip

    coinzip Well-Known Member

  6. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    Yeah, I was looking at that. Doesn't seem like shill work - the sellers don't need shills - but is he maybe an account being set up by a group of sellers to dump unrelated (to jewelry) counterfeits? Most of his buys are from Chinese sellers, and even though it's walking a fine line between realism and blanket bias, I am always strongly suspect of any "odd" activity involving Chinese accounts.

    The Chinese counterfeit offerings on Ebay have always lacked organization - more like just individual "entrepreneurs" making small forays into the market. It would be a very, very bad thing indeed if a coordinated effort by people who understand (and can work successfully in) the Ebay system starts pushing them.

    That seller is on my Watch list, obviously.
     
    Stevearino likes this.
  7. V. Kurt Bellman

    V. Kurt Bellman Yes, I'm blunt! Get over your "feeeeelings".

    No it's not. The essence of good police or analysis work is profiling. If you don't have the guts to say "yes, of course I profile", stay away from law enforcement or policy in any way. Let that counter-riff for the professional apologists. I see Europe is starting to wise up a little.
     
    Soiled likes this.
  8. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    All the same, the only way to effectively profile in forensic analysis is to question yourself as often as you question the subjects. Over-generalizing obfuscates the bigger picture and increases the workload unnecessarily because you end up chasing (undeserving) ghosts. Too often profilers drill down too deeply, and lose the larger picture that not_everyone is a criminal.
     
    silentnviolent and Stevearino like this.
  9. chascat

    chascat Well-Known Member

    I had the same experience with a 1964 S P Kennedy. I paid $100.00 for the coin. I determined it was a fake but the seller did not do returns. E-Bay refunded my $100 and told me to keep the coin.
     
  10. V. Kurt Bellman

    V. Kurt Bellman Yes, I'm blunt! Get over your "feeeeelings".

    Soooo many octogenarian nuns in wheelchairs are bringing down planes, right? Yet they get the TSA once-over. :rolleyes: I see the 9/11 nineteen. I see the pictures of the Charile Hebdo, Boston Marathon, San Bernardino, and Brussels perps, and still we remain willfully blind. Astonishing.
     
  11. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    This has what to do with counterfeit coins? Perspective, man. Perspective.
     
  12. Blissskr

    Blissskr Well-Known Member

    If he was that bad just imagine how it must be dealing with him for any buyers that ever had an issue.
     
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