I also do not see anything wrong with a bid sniper, as long as it is allowed
eBay clearly sees a benefit from allowing it and most likely it's due
to the fact that there are millions of sellers who starts/end their
auctions at all hours of the day and they recognize that everyone
cannot be at their computer all day long to make bids.
However, in Bruce's new site - where there is just a single seller,
the absence of a bid sniper will not be of the same value
also, the absence of a bid sniper on Bruce's site and extended
bidding for popular items, only balances the field between buyers &
sellers. The facts are simple, no less than 95% of all items will end
on time, the rest and most likely lots less than 5%, will see an
extended bidding of a couple minutes to on the outside 30 minutes
maybe. The never ending item will not exist and is a fantasy.
also, I'd like you to point out one auction format where the sellers
have any advantage over bidders. it is only balance between the two,
plain and simple
Rich=========
At 12:19 PM 2/26/2008, Richard Evans wrote:
I can't see how being able to snipe on ebay is a technicality or a loophole.
Ebay auctions are set up to end at a certain time, that's deliberate.
Being able to bid right to the end of the auction, part of the design.
No point expecting bidders to behave as if it were a more
traditional open ended auction format.
Presumably, if you have a problem with sniping software, you also
have a problem with manual sniping.
What's the difference?
Nothing "morally", just a matter of convenience and reliability.
Before using a sniping tool I did it manually, same result, I either
won or was pre-outbid.
If I won anyone then deciding they wanted to big higher had no time,
if I was pre-outbid and wanted to bid higher I had no chance to.
With the ebay format, should I time my bid to deliberately give
other bidders enough time for to react, I think not.
Besides, these days if I'm serious about an item, rather than bid
what I think may be enough to win it, I think carefully about what
the maximum is I'm willing to pay and bid that.
If I lose out, well, I bid my maximum, disappointing but fair enough.
If someone else loses out, the only reason I can see for them being
annoyed is because they bid what they thought may win, (because they
liked to think they'd get it cheap), rather than bidding their maximum.
Ultimately, it puts an end to auction fever, and as a buyer I'm
happy with that.
Sellers get the advantage in enough auction formats.
Cheers,
Rich
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