On Fri, Jun 28, 2024 at 10:26 AM Tony Jones via cctalk < [email protected]> wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 28, 2024, 10:18 AM Sellam Abraham via cctalk < > [email protected]> wrote: > > > > > I put the same disclaimer in my listings. However, it is for naught, as > > eBay steps in and applies its own equity based on various factors, so > stuff > > can and has been returned with refunds even when the seller states they > do > > not accept returns. > > > Stating whether you accept returns has nothing to do with the buyers > ability to request a return for seller fault (i.e "not as described"). > > Stating that you will accept returns just means the buyer can return the > item if they decide they no longer wanted it (no seller fault). > At the end of the day, I'm effectively selling "junk". I don't want anything back. In the rare event my buyer receives something that turns out to be not as described, I'm happy to work with the buyer to arrive at a mutually agreed compromise, and refund them what they believe is fair. I also follow through and file insurance claims when it's clearly the shippers fault (everything I pack is done so as if it were priceless), and have gotten more than a few claims processed successfully over the years. This is part of why I have 100% feedback on almost 900 transactions across 7 years. I'm extremely conscientious as a seller. My account name is "General Computer" if anyone cares. Sellam
