FBI States Online Auction Fraud Biggest Source of Complaints
dipfan writes "The FBI says internet auction fraud was the biggest source of complaints last year, according to the annual report by the Internet Fraud Complaint Centre. The Nigerian bank scam still remains popular, even after all these years. Quote: "During 2001, Internet auction fraud was by far the most reported offense, comprising 42.8% of referred complaints .... Non-deliverable merchandise and payment comprise 20.3% of complaints, and credit and debit card fraud make up 9.4% of complaints."
The report is a 27 page PDF file while the Washington Post
wrote up an article about it." Just ask CowboyNeal about some of his fun with dealing with dealers in Hong Kong.
I claim this frist post in the name of the .test community. Cherish Jorie's left tittie.
I have been messing around in the online auction business for several years now. I can say that you seriously have to do your homework on the person you are bying from.... look at their past ratings by other buyers... of course even with that you never know. Unfortunatly, sometimes you just get burned. It's happened to me a couple of times. Luckly with enough harassment and some "legal looking" documents sent to the seller I was able to clear it up. I know of others not as lucky.
I've found that the online auction world is rewarding, but sometimes not worth the effort. For the most part I've have fine dealings. But I won't buy items that are very expensive ($350+) unless it's from a reputable dealer or in person. Ironicly the most of my problems that I've had on Ebay and others have been from the trusted sellers with tons and tons of feedback. They are slow to ship and have lost my money in the past.
ahh, the egg in the basket..
Free cell phone tracking
This makes a lot of sense.
The Internet prides itself, or, the users of the Internet, on anonymity, so it's no suprise that crime (fraud is just another type of crime) would soar. Without proper dererrents, people have no reasons not to commit these crimes. (Morals aside.)
Of course, we shouldn't overlook the fact that the Internet is where a great deal of commerece is moving, and where there is commerece, there is fraud.
Man is born free; and everywhere he is in chains.
Isn't there some way to work out a reliable escrow service that can act as a middleman for these types of transactions (if desired)?
Otherwise, I don't see a way that this could improve. There's scam artists out there. The Internet is the ultimate place for anonymity. Even a smart consumer could get tricked.
mark
If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
I really don't need to explain how shady that sounds, but one would think CowboyNeal would have learned, by now, that all those Chinese mail-order-bride scams were bound to catch up with him.
So this is the greatest number of complaints, rather than either the most people committing criminal acts, or the most damage incurred. Not so much of a big deal, ultimately. i'm almost sorry for the FBI, with so many other important demands on their attention.
On the other hand, it's nice to see that "suckered into paying good money for Daikatana" rose to 8% on the FBI's compaint list this year.
Gee, it's always been my life goal to help someone embezzle millions of dollars of ill-gotten money from a third-world country. They could feed the people, or they could build schools or infrastructure, but no, it's better that it goes in my pocket and that of the family of the ex-dictator.
Start messing with 'e,. You've got their name and address. (Generally speaking, most of them give you a valid address, just never send) ... so start ordering magazines to their address, and select "Bill Me Later."
Of course, it's a large amount of money you'll probably want to take legal recourse.
Now, on the other hand, I knew a guy who's business was not sending this that he sold on ebay.
Let me explain: First he'd steal high-tech componenets from the school, put them on ebay, sell them for a couple bucks, and then never send or answer his emails or whatever. He'd wait about a month, if they continues bitching, he'd go ahead and send the item, and claim it was originally sent to the wrong address, or whatever. If they simply stopped complaining, thwen he'd relist the item, and start the process over again....
Wow, can anybody believe this? I never would have guessed. My best bet would be that 22.4% of the auction complaints were legit, and 22.4% of the auction complaints were directly linked with Stuipd buyers.
Did I say Stuipd Buyers? Why Yes I Did.
Let me give you an example. Completely hypothetical, of course.
Say I were to sell something I no longer desire on Ebay. My goal is to get it out of my house, and recoup some of my investment. So I put it up for auction with a reasonable reserve. (This hypothetical item is a guitar that I haven't played in months)
Somebody new to good old EPay wins my auction. Horray. I now have in my possession my new ebay friend's guitar. I will release it in to his custody after I recieve my 177 plus 50 shipping, for a grand total of 227.00. (Shipping guitars is a joke)
A week goes by, the money order does not show up. My new ebay buddy informs me that he didn't budget his bills right, and can't afford the guitar now. He wants to back out of the auction, like I'm freaking Wal-Mart. He then understands that "Woah! I've entered in to a legally binding agreement, damn!". After informing my new ebay buddy of this fact, he agrees to send payment the next week.
Another week goes by. My Ebay buddy again emails me that he is fiscally irresponsible. He forgot to pay his car insurance for 3 months, and is about to get cut off. Go figure. I hope the insurance company cuts him off. He asks me if he can just cancel this whole transaction. I told him No, because I'm out my auction fees and I will have to file a complaint against him. He threatens, since he has my address (I'm in Iowa, he is in Hawaii), that he knows where he lives and what goes around comes around. After a polite email back to him, he agrees to send me a money order in 2 weeks and then add an additional $50 for my trouble.
Horray for me, but that doesn't begin to cover the time I've wasted on this transaction.
So I get the money on a Monday. The guitar gets packed and shipped out on a Tuesday, signature required. He gets the guitar this past Monday. On Tuesday I get a nice email threatening that because I did not put brand new strings on the guitar for him, that he is returning it. I informed him that I am not a Guitar Center and that he can't realistically expect to receive a like-new instrument for the price he paid on Ebay.
Nothing back from him yet, and I doubt that there will be. But I bet that you can add him to that 42.8% of complaints, if he can figure out how to dial a phone.
I give up on ebay. Dealing with idiots is not worth the $$$.
-S
We Apprentice Developers and Designers
I thought he was only a voting option :)
Seriously, I'm not surprised about the online fraud that we read once and a while. If you see people paying more on ebay for a used item (i.e. digital camera) than they would pay for a new one, it gives just a small hint on the IQ of some people.
I'm not in sociology, but one thing is for sure, if people are misinformed about the price of the stuff they buy (and it's a lot of them), being naive and not doublechecking someone with 0 feedback or negative complaints sure won't help the cause. It's like leaving your porsche's doors unlocked on a street.
Okay there are also those who got scammed by people with 6000 points like reported on slashdot a few weeks ago, but those are exeptions and you'd get more chances being ripped off with a used car dealer than this if you do everything that ebay recommend you to do.
--- Metamoderating abusive downgraders since my 300th post.
Okay. So 47% of consumer complaints to the FBI were about Internet auctions, and 20% of that was complaints about merchandise that was never shipped or paid for. So, out of all the complaints, 27% of them are people that, I will assume, paid for items but never got them, or had to complain to get them or get a refund.
This is all IFCC data, which pulled it's data from a pool of fewer than 50,000 complaints. This should tell you why percentages are bad and misleading. They don't state in the article anywhere (save for the very bottom) that these percentages are based on a sample of the total data, not the sum of the data itself.
Maybe it should read, "Of a pool of 50,000 complaints from the total number, the percentages read..."
[soapbox]
Statistics are misleading. Just like those auctions you never take any precautions on. 5 steps back for eveloution. And for this, we keep euthenasia illegal in the U.S.?
[/soapbox]
I think you were going for "escargot".
Escrow
The FBI says internet auction fraud was the biggest source of complaints last year, according to the annual report by the Internet Fraud Complaint Centre
Consider the source. If polled, I think that X10/java pop-ups would be the overwhelming complaint. When will mozilla have a java enable/disable button. It is currently too "required" to turn off so it would be nice to have a quick method of turning it on/off.
Life is the leading cause of death in America.
Just ask CowboyNeal about some of his fun with dealing with dealers in Hong Kong.
Well, that's what you get for bidding on that "Asian Massage + FREE Wife!!!" listing.
OTOH, it's excellent in weight loss assistance.
Best Slashdot Co
Just ask CowboyNeal about some of his fun with dealing with dealers in Hong Kong.
/. was starting to get hard pressed for money but I HAD NO IDEA !
I knew
I have had much better luck online than I did using the old direct-mail/telephone model. I have purchased items, sent some of them back, and have had to resort to asking my credit card company to dispute the charges only once - online. The direct mail/telephone model was fraught with delays and companies who did not answer telephones, shipped wrong items, refuse to correct shipments, etc. I would like to see these figures of online fraud compared to good-old-fashioned mail fraud.
...we are from the government - we are here to help...
Why is this news? "Oh, gee, you mean this person I'm trying to buy something from, whom I've never met before, have no idea what his real address, phone number, or even his name may be, might be trying to rip me off?" You know, if people were conducting this transaction over the phone, or by snailmail, everyone would say, "Well Duh" and laugh at the person's stupidity. But it's on the Internet, so suddenly it's a major catastrophe and the FBI has to step in and save us.
It's like all common sense flies out the window whenever any issue deals with the Internet in any way.
It hurts when I pee.
Really its buyer beware.
If you can't afford to burn the same amount of money with a match, you can't afford to spend it on the web.
If you are unwilling top take the risk, then just shop local.
Just think of shopping on the web as a form of gambling where the odds are mostly in your favour unlike the pokies at the local pub or club.
Whether you like it all not, the web is above the law, & its better if it stays that way.
Next up: taxing internet purchases!
Yeah, and they're probably Evil Content Pirates(tm) who are Evil Terrorist Hackers(tm) too!
Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
How much do you need and where do I send the check? Or would it be easier to just FedEx you a box of cash?
A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing -- Emo Phillips
The beauty of this is that if your generated number gets "stolen" by an unscrupulous dealer, you don't need to worry about it because the number will be almost useless!
I'm honestly surprised that these services aren't advertised more widely, because they're probably one of the best ways to protect yourself against credit card fraud when dealing with unknown and far-away merchants. I know that American Express and MBNA cards have this capability, and I've heard rumors that Discover can do the same thing.
You put your money in a snail and it delivers it?
That certainly gives new meaning to the term "snail mail".
C-X C-S
You best bet for domestic purchases that are large is to involve the post office, send money orders via mail, and have all items sent via the same. In this case everything comes under the juridiction of the PostMaster General and Federal law. So you don't have to worry about prosecution over state lines and such cause the case is at the federal level. One the other hand if you use PayPal and UPS (or the equiv) you are stuck within the boundies of that, and with interstate commerce laws (which make prosecution much harder).
Man I must be getting old. I have no idea what that means.
- S
ettings menu is just full of juicy goodness like that. You can turn on and off Java, JavaScript, popups, animated images, disable site stylesheets, and more, all from the menus.Sorry, had to go off topic there.
Visit me on #weirdness on the Galaxynet.
Why don't you try one of my monkeys, they're milder.
- Have a picture