Yup, she should be paid because she did not know anything about the speakers, which is not the case with slick sammy the ebay scammer,now if she knew she was selling sub par electronics & covered up that fact she shouldnt get squat.
But that's my point. We all
assume it's a an intentional scam because of
what's being listed. I haven't seen the auction, but in your post (#36) listing the ways the listing attempts to "deceive a new buyer":
1. Paypal only. I've done that on occasion so I can ship something faster without waiting for a check to clear.
2 & 4. Very high "Buy-it-now" price/MSRP of $4500. Well, it came off the box. We
assume he knows it's inflated?
3. Specs listed from the manufacturer - No description "in his own words". Again, we
assume he should know more about this stuff than the manufacturer.
5. Inflated shipping costs. That seems to be the case in most listings. Ebay's shipping calculator even includes the ability to add any amount you want for "handling charges".
I actually agree that the seller probably knew what he was selling. But, it's only my
assumption along with everyone else. You can't fault them for quoting the manufacturer about the product (if they don't know differently
).
Every one of these "deceptive" tactics are also common legitimate practices when selling on ebay. People quite often just don't know much about what they're selling (or buying). It's not a store where you expect the seller to know all about the poducts he's selling. That's why we occasionally get great deals, too.
The bottom line is as Tomorrow said - The OP should do what's right for him. Again, I think the seller
knew - but the listing could just as easily been posted by the "little ol' lady"