Wednesday, July 19, 2006

eBay Store Fee Changes

Fees for Core listing formats, including Auction-style, Auction-style with Buy It Now and Fixed Price, will remain unchanged.

Please reference this page for changes which will affect Store Inventory listings as of 23:59:59 PT on Monday, August 21, 2006. The Store Inventory listing format is an additional listing format that is only available to eBay Stores subscribers.

Store Inventory Insertion Fee Changes
Store Inventory Final Value Fee Changes

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Monday, July 17, 2006

Next Town Hall: General eBay Topics

Join Bill Cobb, President of eBay North America as he and other leaders from eBay answer your questions and suggestions on how to make eBay a better place to buy and sell.

You can listen to the audio of this Town Hall through Windows Media Player or through Real Player. Details on how to download and install the latest versions of both of these are available on our Town Hall page.

source : http://pages.ebay.com/townhall/?ssPageName=CMDV:AB

eBay BANS Google Checkout

eBay has updated it's "Safe Payments Policy" to specifically NOT allow Google Checkout. I suspect sellers (especially multichannel) will be pretty upset about this.

It will be interesting to see what lame excuse eBay uses to justify this. For example, they will probably say it's new so prone to fraud. Well, in reality it's a credit card gateway (and the same one eBay spends millions with as the top google adwords user) and credit cards are specifically allowed along with gateways (verisign/cybersource/authorize.net, etc.)

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Sunday, July 16, 2006

Bonds 715th home run ball to be sold

By JUSTIN M. NORTON, Associated Press Writer

SAN FRANCISCO - The fan who caught Barry Bonds' 715th home run ball while waiting for a beer and peanuts will sell the history-making ball on Internet auction site eBay.

Andrew Morbitzer said he and his wife, Megan, mulled keeping the ball, but decided they couldn't turn down a possible payoff. The ball might help the couple put a downpayment on a home in pricey San Francisco.

"We decided if we were rich we'd keep the ball because it's fun to have a piece of sports lore to hold on to," Morbitzer told the Associated Press on Tuesday. "But we're not rich."

Experts have said the ball is expected to fetch around $100,000 at auction, far less than the $500,000 some experts say it could have commanded absent the controversy surrounding Bonds and his alleged involvement with steroids.

The auction will start July 24 and last 10 days. Morbitzer is mulling an opening bid of roughly $10,000. The auction will also likely be a "reserve" auction, meaning Morbitzer won't part with the ball for less than a certain price.

"It was fun to have and it's fun to have been the one to catch the ball," Morbitzer said. "It was a great once-in-a-lifetime moment. But the decision is based on the fact that there's someone who would love to pay us for it."

San Jose-based e-Bay has handled auctions for other cherished pieces of baseball history. Among the items sold on the site include a 1909 Honus Wagner T206 card that fetched $1.27 million and Shoeless Joe Jackson's "Black Betsey" bat, which sold for nearly $580,000.

"We were absolutely thrilled to get the call from the Morbitzers," said Jed Clevenger, a sports memorabilia manager with eBay. "It's a great marriage of coincidence and time and history."
Morbitzer said he decided to sell the ball online via eBay because of the chance to reach more potential bidders, including international baseball fans.

"It gives anyone a chance to participate in this auction and be a part of history," he said.
Morbitzer was waiting his turn to stock up on a couple of beers and peanuts on May 28 when Bonds hit the home run that moved him past Babe Ruth in the record books.

For several moments, Bonds' milestone ball appeared to be beyond anyone's reach. It sat lodged on an elevated platform in center field, then trickled off the roof.
Morbitzer caught the ball with one hand.

Morbitzer, a 38-year-old San Francisco marketing director, was quickly ushered away by security. He spent the next few days on a circuit of talk shows and sports programs.
Morbitzer said he and his wife were able to avoid detection by acting famous.

"We changed clothes and wore a hat and sun glasses," Morbitzer said. "It worked. The entire time, we had one person figure out who we were."

source : http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060712/ap_on_sp_ba_ne/bbo_bonds715_ball