By Neil BarnesPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:23 GMT
Don't hold back, tell us what you *really* think!
A case for computers to not be available for all? #
By Pete JamesPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:26 GMT
We all had that hopeful dream about computers, the web, world peace and all that. But along comes someone who is determined to inflict pain on others despite being caught and punished before. Someone who is 20 and already married with two kids yet spent the proceeds on limo rides with friends!
Someone who, in other words, should be banned from using a computer or accessing the web. For a long, long time. And possibly only allowed monitored access afterwards as well.
I actually think this should be a de facto punishment of anyone who commits a crime. Deny them the liberty to communicate electronically with others for a set length of time. Female crime would drop pretty sharpish anyway!
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:33 GMT
The sentence is, IMHO, about right.
The thing that really sucks is that he would, probably, have gotten a lighter sentence for mugging an old dear in the street for a tenner. The justice system, IMHO, puts far too much emphasis on financial loss when it should concentrate on locking up those that commit violent crimes (and locking them up for a very long time)
By Graham WoodPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:46 GMT
I would agree that such a minor punishment for a repeat offender isn't much of a deterrant. However, considering how crowded the jails are, who should we release to let him stay in there longer.
I'd rather an ebay scammer were out than a repeat offence burglar - but that's probably because my "lack of faith in ecommerce" means that I wouldn't use ebay if you paid me - I tend to stick to more traditional online shops, even if it costs a couple of quid more.
By nickjPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:47 GMT
he should still have been inside for the first one - looks like 10 - 12 yrs for £45K of armed robbery. eg http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/nottinghamshire/5016790.stm
Still, I suppose you could argue ripping ebayers off is performing a public service in educating dimwits about t'interent.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:53 GMT
Look in almost any category, and the chances are you'll find umpteen buy-it-nows from the same seller, improperly registered as a "private" seller but very obviously buying to sell, ie most definitely running a business not selling their own unwanted presents and family possessions.
Now, consider that the both the law and ebay require business sellers to include their name and address either in their listing or on their ME page -- because the law requires that information to be available to potential buyers, BEFORE they bid for their items.
Now, consider what proportion of business sellers on ebay actually DO include their name and address in the specified manner. Probably LESS THAN ONE PER CENT.
Ebay is effectively aiding and abetting by turning a blind eye to sellers who fraudulently misrepresent themselves as private sellers and/or admit to being businesses but fail to include their name and address.
A simple answer would be to make online auction houses jointly liable in law for the misdemeanors of those who sell on the site, which would make them more keen to validate their sellers and ensure they include the necessary legal information in their listings.
By N1AKPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:07 GMT
I don't think the whole arguement about it being a none serious crime really holds up, he ripped people off for thousands of pounds, left people feeling cheated, made people go through the hassle of the courts to get justice, and undermines the value of a useful (but flawed) method of trading.
The problem is what do you do with someone who will spend the time in prison then do it again? Locking him up just wastes a massive amount of money and is a waste of a life, it also doesn't help the victims.
To me a system of community service (shit jobs) with short term imprisonment in unpleasent conditions if he fails to attend is probably the way forwards. Cheap labour, cheaper prison places if they dont 'co-operate' and a way to pay back the victims.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:25 GMT
I use ebay quite a bit (am not a seller just have a lot of junk). Any auction I operate is on a strict no pay, no receive any goods.
So how can you get scammed. Ok an idiot might bid and not pay but he doesn't get the goods either. Unless of course the people that have been scammed have sent him items before payment has cleared. Then in some ways that is really stupid on the sellers part. I only accept certain payment methods and if anyone uses a cheque it has to clear in my account before I send the item. I check with the bank to make sure the cheque can't be cancelled.
The article doesn't sound like he was a seller just a bidder. If this is the case and the goods don't exist then use a secure payment method and you will get your money back. I have experienced a seller who just didn't send me the item and broke off all contact. Dispute filed with Paypal and received my money 2 weeks later.
It's not right he scammed people but if you are handing over goods before payment cleared that I am sorry you only have yourself to blame. It's a little like the people who fall for the 419 scam.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:29 GMT
Yes, and eBay does not make it any easier to reclaim money... The crap I went through to get my claim through eBay's system is nothing short of a bad joke. Today I finally received my claimed money after nearly 7 months, yes, that's SEVEN months. I lodged my claim in early February.
By Luke WellsPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:29 GMT
So 2 years (12 months) in prison...... Whats to stop him doing it all again ?
Make thousands and thousands of pounds through crime, live a life of luxury blowing cash on limos and shopping trips and then get 12 months inside a nice cosy prison with 3 meals cooked for you a day, access to a gym, TV and internet.
I have to cook my meals and pay for my TV, internet and Gym membership for god sake.
Actually, with his free prison broadband service, whats to stop him starting scamming before he is relased?
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:42 GMT
Basically, it's evolution.
People will be scammed until they reliase that actually it CAN happen to them. Once this has been achieved, the income for scammers will dry up and the scammers will fade out of history.
If you get done by a phishing or eBay scammer then, quite frankly, you're not intellegent enough to use the internet. A few years ago this would not have been the case, however nowadays with all the press and hype surrounding the completely evil filth that is the internet [1], you deserve to have your access rights removed.
As I said, it's evolution. Maybe users won't be removed from the gene pool, but certainly from the threadpool...
[1] Ah yes, the internet. According to the Daily Mail (and similar papers) the source of all child abuse, pornography and satan worshipping since the ice-age - maybe one of the criteria for an ISP should be "Do you read the Daily Mail? If yes, you don't want to use the internet. If no, how much can we charge you?"
I've been defrauded by a guy selling a graphics card... Took me for £200. Lodged a complaint with eBay who had the account frozen, and they started their procedure for getting me a refund.
Outcome? 3 months later, i'd received £2.24. Apparently that's satisfactory for them, and they closed the case.
eBay / PayPal has attrocious practices regarding this, and i'd never touch either again.
By Graham NichollsPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 12:17 GMT
Having foolishly been ripped off by a seller of DVDs on ebay (they were pirate copies), and repoorted this to ebay, from their reaction I can only conclude that ebay are happy for a certain amount of fraud (a lot, ISTM) to carry on if it means that hey can continue to operate easily. Ebay doing something about the fraud that goes on would just be too difficult for them - which is why they need to be forced in to it by law. They hide behind the defence that they a re "just providing a marketplace", which seems pretty flimsy to me. I'm no shill for copyright holders (I've used Linux for over 10 years, and contribute to EFF), but I still hate the casual practise of copying and selling DVDs/music. Several ebayers told me (when I left negative feedback) that "of course they were pirated" - and that I should have expected that. Well I didn't, and was astounded that they were happy for it to be so. Ah well, as someone else said, I wouldn't use ebay if you paid me to.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 12:23 GMT
> So 2 years (12 months) in prison...... Whats to stop him doing it all again ?
You guys in the UK must have country clubs for jails.
Here in the US, we have charming outfits like Rikers Island. To call these places hellholes is doing hellholes a disservice.
A 20-year-old coming into Rikers would be gang-raped by HIV-positive brutes within a couple of days, have his face rearranged and his pride reduced to a shambles.
His life from here on will be a hell that I doubt anyone here even has the capacity to imagine.
But maybe UK prisons are all tea and crumpets.
Anyone with half a brain can spot bogus sellers on eBay.... #
By BatCatPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 12:41 GMT
I've bought and sold tons of stuff on eBay and never had a problem. Maybe that's because I take care who I buy from and don't get suckered into too-good-to-be-true deals, "I only accept cash / PO / Cheque payments because..." type crap, or suspicious / missing feedback history.
If you buy with paypal, or better still a credit card, you're covered against fraud anyway. Same goes for any online purchase. Have a look at Section 75 of Consumer Credit Act 1974 - then cancel your "fraud protection insurance" kindly sold to you by your bank, you don't need it, they do.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 12:43 GMT
"Any auction I operate is on a strict no pay, no receive any goods. So how can you get scammed."
Even if you do that, there's still LOTS of ways of getting scammed. For example:
-Bidder wins auction, sends money to seller by paypal.
-Seller sees money has arrived, sends goods.
-Bidder receives goods but claims goods never arrived, starts chargeback with Paypal.
-Seller has money taken from their Paypal account, so they've lost the money AND the item.
It's up to the seller to prove that the bidder received the goods. Even with recorded deliveries though, there have been cases where the bidder has still managed to get a chargeback from Paypal successfully because they claim someone else signed for the item.
Ebay protects buyers more than it protects sellers, and this is how a lot of scammers operate.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 13:14 GMT
"The article doesn't sound like he was a seller just a bidder"
Erm.... "This time around the married father-of-two ran bogus auctions for items including 2006 Ryder Cup tickets, a Sony camcorder, and hi-tech mobile phones"
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 13:59 GMT
"I can only conclude that ebay are happy for a certain amount of fraud"
Precisely why its the LAW that needs to make the auctioneer jointly responsible for that fraud. Ebay isn't going to do it voluntarily if it thinks it can get away without.
An "Online Auctions Act" could make sites such as ebay jointly responsible if their sellers fail to supply goods or honour statutory obligations including warranty, or if the seller having misrepresented the goods as being in the UK then ships them from elsewhere, thereby causing the buyer unexpected expense through tax, duty or loss of expected statutory rights such as fitness for purpose. It could also very sensibly extend the provisions of the Distance Selling Act to ALL online auctions not just those at fixed price.
By Pascal MonettPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 14:05 GMT
"if you are handing over goods before payment cleared that I am sorry you only have yourself to blame"
And of course, if you pay before seeing the goods, you only have yourself to blame as well, I suppose ?
The only true solution to this situation is a function apparently missing on Ebay (don't know, have never and will never use it) :
When a bid is accepted and final, automatically Ebay should create an escrow account between the seller and the buyer. The buyer would transfer the money to that escrow account and could no longer retrieve it without due process. The seller could then send the items to their recipient under guaranteed postal delivery. Once the post has confirmed delivery to Ebay, the escrow account is released to the seller. Any issue along the line gets bumped into the resolution process.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 14:18 GMT
True enough comments. It has been my experience that I have had very few problems on ebay.
Yes I have been hit by the copied DVD's but then I never bid much for any DVD just in case.
Yes someone could say they haven't received an item but everything I send goes Recorded Delivery and I never allow anyone to collect an item (a great scam I heard about, collect an item then say you didn't receive it)
I don't sell to anyone with low feedback scores and all my auctions require Paypal registered addresses.
I never buy high value items from new sellers i.e. 50 of so feedback 100% positive.
As I said there are risks but I try to minimalise them as much as possible. When I had my incident with the idiot who took my money and didn't send the goods I was not following my own rules and took a chance because it was a bargain. Too good to be true = it is, doesn't matter about the excuses.
It's like anything in life you have to mitigate the risk. Providing you do that you will be less likely to get burnt. You can't avoid it all together but you have a better chance.
Saying you won't use ebay at all because you are scared of being scammed is like not stepping outside for fear of being stabbed. All are likely it's how much of a risk it is.
By Morely DotesPosted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 18:07 GMT
Divestiture of citizenship, and deportation. Deportation not to some paradise like Australia, but deportation to Iran, Libya, Gaza, Mongolia, North Korea, or a similar "Peoples' Paradise." Deportation without documents of any kind, with only the cloths on his back, no wallet, no jewelry, nothing. No need to ask the permission of the destination government, either; it's not as if these are people we want as friends. Well, I suppose a parachute might be a reasonable possession, and perhaps 5 minutes of instruction would be a gift that's appreciated at some point.
It's not capital punishment; it's an opportunity to learn how to get along in a world where hard work and honesty are rewarded (with a casket around age 35).
By Charles ManningPosted Thursday 23rd August 2007 02:40 GMT
Sell the prisoners' time on ebay as slave labour.
That way they will contribute to society and pay their own way (for once).
They won't need 3 meals a day (govermnent savings), won't need internet to keep them occupied (more bandwidth for the law abiding) and they will be kept fit and occupied so won't need the TV and gym equipment (these can be sold on ebay for a nice tax refund).
.... and this lifestyle might be a better deterrant.
Comments on: Serial eBay fraudster jailed for two years
Scum got off too easy. #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:10 GMT
Re: Scum got off too easy #
By Neil Barnes Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:23 GMT
A case for computers to not be available for all? #
By Pete James Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:26 GMT
A bit of a prick, but........... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:33 GMT
Young offender? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:40 GMT
Re: Scum got off too easy #
By Graham Wood Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:46 GMT
armed robbery #
By nickj Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:47 GMT
He should have gone away for longer #
By Greg Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:49 GMT
Ebay makes scamming far too easy #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 10:53 GMT
Hard Balance #
By N1AK Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:07 GMT
Is it me? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:25 GMT
Re: Ebay makes scamming far too easy #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:29 GMT
No wonder scum keep re-offending #
By Luke Wells Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:29 GMT
Darwin in all his glory... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:42 GMT
Victim #
By Ash Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 11:51 GMT
Ebay - thieves charter #
By Graham Nicholls Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 12:17 GMT
20 and Father of two? #
By Adrian Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 12:21 GMT
@No wonder scum keep re-offending #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 12:23 GMT
Anyone with half a brain can spot bogus sellers on eBay.... #
By BatCat Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 12:41 GMT
Scamming on ebay is frighteningly easy #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 12:43 GMT
Why should this particular idiot #
By Alan Donaly Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 12:55 GMT
Re: Scum got off too easy #
By Paul M Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 13:14 GMT
Re: Is it me? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 13:14 GMT
Ebay fraud tolerance #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 13:59 GMT
Handing over the goods #
By Pascal Monett Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 14:05 GMT
Re: Is it me? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 14:18 GMT
Solution to the overcrowded prisons problem #
By Morely Dotes Posted Wednesday 22nd August 2007 18:07 GMT
re: Solution to the overcrowded prisons problem #
By Charles Manning Posted Thursday 23rd August 2007 02:40 GMT
It's as easy as NUOAS.... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 23rd August 2007 04:30 GMT
Thick?? #
By Tricia Pulley Posted Thursday 23rd August 2007 16:11 GMT