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01-27-2017, 11:24 AM
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#21
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Re: Leading bidder on eBay
In the past, I've used Gixen
Doesn't mean I ever won the auction...
__________________
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01-27-2017, 12:05 PM
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#22
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Re: Leading bidder on eBay
You should be ok, the demand is not very high for that figure right now.
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01-27-2017, 02:00 PM
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#23
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Location: British Columbia
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Re: Leading bidder on eBay
But the one that sells for 140 plus kit is the original release with all the extras the new one don't get
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01-27-2017, 04:33 PM
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#24
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Location: Brantford, Ontario
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Re: Leading bidder on eBay
Although I've never seen it, it'd be interesting to see two bidding bots working against each other on the same item. That'd shoot the price WAY up, I'm sure.
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01-27-2017, 05:59 PM
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#25
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Re: Leading bidder on eBay
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shepp
Although I've never seen it, it'd be interesting to see two bidding bots working against each other on the same item. That'd shoot the price WAY up, I'm sure.
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It doesn't work like that. Both programs work independently of each other, they don't know what the other is bidding. They simply enter a maximum bid as late as they can and the highest maximum bid entered gets it. It's the same as if you entered it yourself, somehow managing to enter it exactly before the auction ended.
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01-27-2017, 08:09 PM
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#26
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Re: Leading bidder on eBay
Considering the dubious morality of auction sniping, let alone using bots to do it, and how frowned upon the whole thing is among people who use online marketplaces in general, I don't think any of you should be publicly telling others that you engage in such a practice.
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01-27-2017, 08:37 PM
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#27
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Re: Leading bidder on eBay
If you're manually bidding and put in a last second bid, then there's nothing immoral about it since your placing your bid in the alloted time. Using bots is a little more gray
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01-27-2017, 08:41 PM
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#28
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Re: Leading bidder on eBay
Yeah, manual sniping isn't at all immoral. It's just how you bid. I personally don't understand bidding before the end of an auction, unless you have an absolute fixed maximum amount you are willing to pay. Then it makes sense to just enter your absolute max and just wait and see.
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01-27-2017, 09:58 PM
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#30
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Re: Leading bidder on eBay
Quote:
Originally Posted by B13
You refused to pay fo the item your purchased from me on ebay last year and I got stuck not being able to sell my item again for a week. Are you really whining because you can't have/afford what you want?
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LOL, dun dun dun.....
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hoffman
Yeah, manual sniping isn't at all immoral. It's just how you bid. I personally don't understand bidding before the end of an auction, unless you have an absolute fixed maximum amount you are willing to pay. Then it makes sense to just enter your absolute max and just wait and see.
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Bid sniping is a matter of one's own psyche. For example, if you bid your absolute max early on with ample time remaining, you put yourself at risk of someone else exceeding your "preferred" limit. If that limit does get exceeded and you're left with time on the clock, you'll be more tempted to make rash decisions to go beyond your preferred limit. So by trying to bid snipe near the final seconds of the auction when less time is remaining, there's a lower chance of exceeding that threshold if your bid limit hasn't been reached by other competing bids yet. If you run out of time, you accept the loss because it is what it is whereas if the price reached a point that broke your limit and you got plenty of time left to try and get the lead back, you put more stress on yourself trying to justify how much more over-budget can you really push yourself? Really, it's cheaper in the long run to bid snipe, and a lot less heartache.
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