
Never mind that winning an eBay bid is a binding contract and now the guy has little chance of selling the tickets. So he concocted a fiendish scheme to trick her into paying.
What he did is email her from a different email address and say: "hey, I saw you won those tickets, I'd really like to go, can I buy them from you for $1,000?"
She agreed, and lo and behold, she contacts him as the original seller and says "oops, changed my mind, I want to pay for those after all." He brings her the tickets, collects the money, and then goes home and has his sockpuppet bidder back out of the deal with her.
She agreed, and lo and behold, she contacts him as the original seller and says "oops, changed my mind, I want to pay for those after all." He brings her the tickets, collects the money, and then goes home and has his sockpuppet bidder back out of the deal with her.
Once again proving there are two user classes on eBay: predator and prey. Unethical? Yes. Illegal? Probably not. An eBay bid is a binding contract. An email is not. What do you think? Sound off in the comments.
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