TXBullion wrote:all the tell tale signs of a rip off. I clicked report item
csb3tennessee wrote:TXBullion wrote:all the tell tale signs of a rip off. I clicked report item
I'm glad you did that- I wasn't sure about the proper procedure for doing that. I'm just amazed at the number of buyers... Although I was wondering about this scenario: suppose you buy them on a chance (which is 0) that these are not counterfeit. You pay thru paypal, get the coins (which is not a sure thing either), realize they're fake, get a refund thru paypal. If they are real, you hit the jackpot. Its just a roll of the dice. Is my logic wrong? Just wondering.................
barrytrot wrote:csb3tennessee wrote:TXBullion wrote:all the tell tale signs of a rip off. I clicked report item
I'm glad you did that- I wasn't sure about the proper procedure for doing that. I'm just amazed at the number of buyers... Although I was wondering about this scenario: suppose you buy them on a chance (which is 0) that these are not counterfeit. You pay thru paypal, get the coins (which is not a sure thing either), realize they're fake, get a refund thru paypal. If they are real, you hit the jackpot. Its just a roll of the dice. Is my logic wrong? Just wondering.................
Your logic is sound. However it lacks a couple points:
1. Time is money. Going through all that will take up some of your valuable and FINITE time.
2. It will also "take time" to recover your money. In the meantime, you may have wanted to use it elsewhere.
3. There is a very small chance (unless you use American Express) that Paypal would not fully refund you. With Amex there is zero chance of not being refunded as Amex quite simply hates merchants.
barrytrot wrote:csb3tennessee wrote:TXBullion wrote:all the tell tale signs of a rip off. I clicked report item
I'm glad you did that- I wasn't sure about the proper procedure for doing that. I'm just amazed at the number of buyers... Although I was wondering about this scenario: suppose you buy them on a chance (which is 0) that these are not counterfeit. You pay thru paypal, get the coins (which is not a sure thing either), realize they're fake, get a refund thru paypal. If they are real, you hit the jackpot. Its just a roll of the dice. Is my logic wrong? Just wondering.................
Your logic is sound. However it lacks a couple points:
1. Time is money. Going through all that will take up some of your valuable and FINITE time.
2. It will also "take time" to recover your money. In the meantime, you may have wanted to use it elsewhere.
3. There is a very small chance (unless you use American Express) that Paypal would not fully refund you. With Amex there is zero chance of not being refunded as Amex quite simply hates merchants.
TXBullion wrote:Me and at least one other member did this a while back. Same picture, same scenario. Listing was later pulled by ebay and paypal disputes were filed and we got our money back
barrytrot wrote:TXBullion wrote:Me and at least one other member did this a while back. Same picture, same scenario. Listing was later pulled by ebay and paypal disputes were filed and we got our money back
So was it worth it? Zero profit and time wasted. No chance of a gain. I don't recommend it
Treetop wrote:I dont think there is any chance these are real. This person is ambitious enough to sell items internationally online, and presumably make a profit of some level. surely if they came across 1000s of peace dollars such a person would try to find the best price when selling them. this was a lot of money generated fast. was it the type of buy it now you have to pay for it right away?
Treetop wrote:Its possible the person thinks they are real, and has a connection for a steady supply at a set price. but then why the but it now of such a low price? the seller would of looked for the best price and tried to get that. a seller who sold hundreds of items at 1-2 bucks a pop. Built up a good respectible feedback, then sold 35k in silver at basement prices in a day....
barrytrot wrote:Treetop wrote:I dont think there is any chance these are real. This person is ambitious enough to sell items internationally online, and presumably make a profit of some level. surely if they came across 1000s of peace dollars such a person would try to find the best price when selling them. this was a lot of money generated fast. was it the type of buy it now you have to pay for it right away?
Yes, I tested it and they required you to PAY IMMEDIATELY.
csb3tennessee wrote:I spoke with a local coin dealer that I've been buying from for about 25 yrs about this thing- he told me (and he's pretty knowledgable) that the Feds are now blocking shipments of Chinese coins from entering into the US due to all the counterfeits. I'm not certain how they would accomplish this, but then again, I'm ignorant as to foreign imports and how they must be declared when entering the U.S. Anybody else hear anything about this?
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