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• Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/@Goldeneraguitars
Ian
Lowering my expectations has succeeded beyond my wildest dreams.
I have far more success selling on Marketplace than here. Interestingly it's mostly the lower value items that attract the scam posts, too.
An email arrives from DPD/FedEx, telling you that the booking is now made, yay! But before collection you must buy insurance to cover the amount of cash that the buyer is sending. Buyer says don't worry, he will include this extra insurance money with the cash for the item. OK, you say.
DPD/FedEx/etc sends you an email to make payment for the insurance. It's not that much. But it will not be via PayPal, bank transfer or anything traceable. Instead it will be something like an Apple/Amazon gift card. You will be told to buy it online, then send the code to DPD/Fedex/etc. You do that.
And that's the scam. The DPD/FedEx emails were fake. The buyer has the code that he can sell on. Your email address will be sold, too, as an easy mark.
The item that you were trying to sell sits sadly on the shelf, making you feel like a mug every time you see it out of the corner of your eye.
Thanks to goldtop for explaining the scam. None of them replied again so at least they're not persistent.
A propa Japs Eye...
Not that all of these shops are local to me as in the village I live in, but all are located within 10 miles of me. The local Tescos - I mean to use the ''S'' this time as there are 4 local to me, ASDAS, Sainsbury, M&S and Post Offices, all limit the number of gift cards, Amazon vouchers, Netflix Vouchers, Apple vouchers, Google Vouchers, and Microsoft, Playstation and Nintendo vouchers, you can purchase at a time due to just how prevalent this scam is and often people fall for it, And it isn't just that they limit you to buying no more than 2 gift cards, but there is also a value limit, so you can either buy 2 gift cards or a single gift card worth £100 at a time - it's actually meant to be per day but if the check out staff are satisfied you are buying them for the ''right reasons'' and not to pay off scammers as in if you bring 3 gift cards to the check out the staff will ask you questions about them and if satisfied they let you join the que again to buy more gift cards
There's a Microsoft Research paper that shows that the scams are deliberately designed so that most people won't fall for them. This is counter-intuitive. But the scam can only work if the only sellers who engage fully are the properly gullible. No point wasting time on people who are unlikely to do the last bit (gift card code).
A hell of a lot of the scams involving payment via gift cards are actually carried out by children, and it's not done to make money, but rather to make purchases on the various platforms that use the gift cards, literally to buy in game purchases like skins for Fortnite. MMO's and online games - especially COD, friends and I got into during lockdown was and probably still is full of kids trying to pull gift card scams, send me ''X' amount in Steam/Microsoft/Playstaion/Nintendo vouchers and I will max out your character, prestige your character, max out your resources ..... all within a matter of hours, obviously something impossible to do, yet a hell of a lot of people still fall for it.
Amazingly both competent & normal, I usually have to deal with complete nutcases & frauds
I placed the ad and had a few time wasters make contact and then somebody messages me and tells me they'll send a van with cash, and his mate is the driver. I rolled my eyes and waited for the scam but nothing happened.
So I agreed, I had nothing to lose except a bit of time if he didn't turn up, and I was doing other stuff anyway so it was hardly an inconvenience.
Mid-morning a 7.5 tonne lorry turns up outside the house, the driver knocks the door and hands over £500 in cash. I helped him with the machine into the back of his wagon and off he went.
Everyone was happy.
Be vigilant, of course, and walk away the moment something smells off, but not everyone is out to rip you off.
I meant April. ~ Simon Weir
Bit of trading feedback here.
I sold a '59 LP Jr on FB Marketplace to someone who was going to fly in from Europe, get a mate to collect him from Stansted and buy - all on a Sunday. Really? But he did - lovely chap, constantly busy gigging (in a globally successful tribute band). He did a bank transfer on the spot, which I was a bit nervous about. All was good.