Yes, the protection is to check My eBay every day for things you are not selling and messages. As you might suspect with a 1 day auction your window of discovery is small.
On Fri, 26 Oct 2007 14:07:00 -0400, wilenz...@bellsouth.net wrote: >Unless you check "My eBay" regularly to see if you are "selling" items you >don't own, then have the posting pulled before the auction ends. >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Rich" <rich-m...@octoxol.com> >To: "Antique Phonograph List" <phono-l@oldcrank.org> >Sent: Friday, October 26, 2007 10:49 AM >Subject: Re: [Phono-L] RE: Internet security >> Once you have the username and password you can change the registered >> e-mail. that would be the >> first thing to do. If eBay does not detect the fraud, you will never >> know. Until the mad feedback hits. >> >> On Fri, 26 Oct 2007 09:53:01 -0400, BruceY wrote: >> >>>:When somebody hijacks your ebay account and then puts iems on ebay, why >>>doesn't the offended party find out immediatiely about the posting. Since >>>ebay always sends an immediate confriming email to the account holders >>>email >>>address, that would be the "red flag" that signals that illegal activity >>>has >>>taken plance and the true owner of the account could then take proper >>>action >>>to report it to ebay, pull the posting and change his ebay ID and >>>password. >>>Or am I missing something here? >> >>>Bruce >>>----- Original Message ----- >>>From: "Rich" <rich-m...@octoxol.com> >>>To: "Antique Phonograph List" <phono-l@oldcrank.org> >>>Sent: Friday, October 26, 2007 9:38 AM >>>Subject: Re: [Phono-L] RE: Internet security >> >> >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Phono-L mailing list >> http://phono-l.oldcrank.org >> >_______________________________________________ >Phono-L mailing list >http://phono-l.oldcrank.org