Hi Richard and List,  I agree with your  solution but not your objection to 
sniping within the framework that is  eBay.

Ebay has set up a situation where it is the smart thing to  do.  As you 
suggest, if no item will officially end within even just one  minute from the 
time the last bid was placed, this would end the advantage of  sniping.

I personally use a sniping service so when I see an item I want,  I set up 
the snipe bid that will be executed a few seconds before auction  end.  This 
set up can be taken care of days before the auction  ends.

I have saved many hundreds of dollars, mostly on microscope  equipment.

It's not nice or fair but it is the way eBay is set up, so why  not play to 
win.

Tom



In a message dated 3/17/2010 5:58:10  P.M. Mountain Daylight Time, 
damoc...@yahoo.com writes:
This mentality,  waiting until the last few seconds before bidding, is 
something I just don't  get. Maybe someone can explain it to me.

I bid for lots on ebay just like  I do when I bid at a real auction. I set 
in my head what I believe the value of  an item and what I have available in 
my budget to bid for that item. I then bid  that much and no more. If I get 
the item, great. If not, someone wanted it more  and we're willing to pay 
more for the item...

While I will sometimes  raise my ebay bid a little before the end of the 
auction, I really don't  understand the idea of sitting there and in the last 
second or two, to try to  jam in bids high enough to win the item.

Do snipers really want the item  or are they just trying to screw others 
out of the item? Are they just trying to  get the item at a lower price, 
thinking that their competitors will just rebid  again, upping the price?

I see this on meteorite auctions every so often,  but much more often on 
the Daguerreotypes I bid on. The reason I was reminded of  it was a lot I just 
lost out on. There wasn't just one sniper, but two. The both  bid at the 
exact same time, 2 seconds before the auction ended...

As I  said, it doesn't mater that I lost the lot. It went for more than I 
was willing  to pay, so I wouldn't have rebid even if I could.

Possibly someone can  explain what is gained by bidding like this instead 
of just bidding what you  think it's worth and letting it go for that...

I'd really like to see  ebay eliminate this foolery. It'd be pretty simple. 
Any bids that occur within  one minute of the closing time of the auction 
automatically resets the end time  by 10 minutes, or 30 minutes. The snipers 
games are eliminated and the dealers  (and ebay) gets more profits because 
the auction remains open for the bidding to  continue to higher levels. Just 
like in a real live  auction.

Thanks

--
Richard Kowalski
Full Moon  Photography
IMCA #1081



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