What about "shill-sniping"? And "shilly-shalling"? And "snap-sniping"? And "snap-shilling"? Should we be afraid, be very afraid? Duke, Vancouver
----- Original Message -----
From: JR
Sent: Saturday, November 12, 2005 11:35 AM
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Shill me, Seymour

Dario,
 
You know, even though I think of myself as worldly-wise, you point out a technique I had never even thought of.  If we postulate that the seller is in on the deal, then yes, I suppose that with Private auctions (where the bid history is never visible either during or after the auction), it would be possible to "flush out" people's maximum bids by having the shill simply bid until he is top bidder, then quickly retract or reject the shill's last bid and leave the item sitting right at the real bidder's maximum bid. That would be a fairly elaborate technique to orchestrate on a large scale, however, and I suspect it would draw eBay's attention pretty quickly if it were done hundreds of times during a single auction. Still, it could happen. Another reason to snipe at the last second.
 
Taking the logic of this idea one step further,  I suppose the potential for this kind of abuse would be greater in private internet auctions taking place in an non-eBay environment where there was no "watchdog" behind the scenes who would ever see "something not quite right here" like eBay might (I emphasize "might"). *Sigh* As Cat Stevens said, baby, it's a wild world. As Ron very helpfully explained, at least there are techniques you can use in a live floor auction to protect yourself to some extent against shilling that simply aren't available in an on-line environment.
 
But again, this is where the sniper programs come in handy and are an excellent hedge against auction manipulation. You place a maximum bid that is far lower than what you are actually willing to pay during the early days of the auction. If it gets trumped -- for whatever reason -- you are waiting in the wings with a sniper bid that will be placed in the last seconds which contains your REAL maximum bid. Since all the snipes go off at the virtually same time in cyberspace where no one -- not even the seller or eBay itself -- has any way of seeing what's happening in those last few seconds or controlling it, trying to shill during the last few seconds would be foolish and ineffective. Except in the case where all the shill is trying to do is guarantee that the item doesn't sell to a genuine bidder for less than the seller or consigner is willing to let it go for.
 
In truth, I think that most of the shilling which does occur, wherever it occurs, is not so much evil intent as it is trying to make sure an item sells for at least the minimum amount the seller wants to let it go for. Why not use a reserve then? Well, because as we've seen on this list, most people will not bid on an item with a reserve. So, the only other thing a seller/consigner can do is place a minimum starting bid on the item that is the true minimum amount that they are willing to let the item go for. But that discourages bidding as well, as so many people won't bid on an item where the minimum is close to the market value -- we've seen that on MPB -- because they want to believe they can snap up a great item cheap, for a super-bargain price. This is not realistic thinking on the part of bidders when it comes to quality vintage posters, but that doesn't stop people from thinking way -- and choosing which auctions to bid on based on that idea. As Bruce realized and proved so many years ago.
 
So, you throw in massive competition from so many other sellers and you end up in a situation where sellers/consigners feel they have no choice but to start their items off at absurdly low minimum bids... even something as insipid as a 99-cent starting bid on an original FRANKENSTEIN one-sheet. But... honestly now... who is going to take a chance on that FRANKENSTEIN one-sheet -- or any other valuable poster, even one worth "only" several hundred dollars -- being sold for way below what it is worth just because during that one 7-day period not enough people wanted it that bad... or had the money that week... or saw the auction at all?
 
All of this can lead to "reserve shilling" where the shill is instructed to get the price up to X dollars (the amount the seller/consigner is willing to let the item go for) and then stop pushing and let the true market take the item higher than that, if it turns out there is enough interest in the item to do so.
 
It's a crazy situation -- people shouldn't feel they have to start out valuable posters at absurdly low minimum bids and so be forced to resort to this kind of thing to protect their investment, but sadly, that's the auction environment which eBay has created over the years -- where you have  this massive daily flux of tens of thousands of posters being up for auction at all times in a global bidding environment.
 
And yes, Bruce had a whole lot to do with creating the public mentality on eBay that ALL posters -- even very valuable posters -- should start out at 99 cents. There's no question about that.  But if he had not been the one to do it, wouldn't someone else have come along and done it eventually? Probably. I'm sure originally Bruce was just doing it as a PR stunt, but the long-term effect on the overall marketplace has been very deleterious for everyone else, and even for him to a lesser extent in the long run, I think.
 
There are consequences for actions.
 
-- JR
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, November 12, 2005 10:14
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Shill me, Seymour

Well spoken, JR
To make matters worse, "Private Auctions" yes indeed the shillsheister can easy find out your reserve by bidding high and then re tract.
You wouldn't even know it!
Best,
Dario.
JR wrote:
Guys, guys, guys...
 
It's not that simple, and we all know it. Yes, if you set a maximum bid and say "I will pay no more" you cannot be run up OVER that amount by a shill -- but, dudes, you sure can be run up TO that amount, or darn close to it, anyway.
 
To say that the shill doesn't know what the maximum bid you have in mind may be is true, but that has never prevented shills in the past from working the room, live or electronic, to see how high they could push bidders who seem very interested in a particular item. That's why they're called shills and why they've been around auctions since the days when dinosaurs ruled the earth. Sometimes the shill guesses wrong, pushes to hard and gets stuck. But a good shill... one with experience who knows the market and the bidding audience he's working on, can get a pretty good feel for what he can get away with.
 
So, a genuine bidder can end up paying much more for an item than he might otherwise have paid if there is expert, experienced shilling going on, let's not pretend that can't happen. I presume the possibility of this having happened is what Dario is upset about. Understandably. But unfortunately that's a danger in any auction -- shilling can happen at anyone's auction. It can happen without the seller even being aware of it, if it turns out to be a conspiracy between the shill and the consigner, rather than the shill and the seller.
 
Kirby, Ron and others are correct in saying that the only thing you can do about shilling -- since it can't be stopped, is almost impossible to prove, and there's no way to know if it really is happening or if you are simply up against another genuine bidder who also wants the item -- is to stick to your maximum bid and not let yourself get pushed up any further than you are really willing to pay.
 
Does this mean that you will lose a lot of auctions? You betcha. Some of them you will lose to genuine bidders. Others you will stick the shills with.
 
But there's always another auction, so all you can do is try to keep from getting carried away in a last-minute bidding wars (whatever the cause).
 
Oddly, the sniper programs have turned out to be a shill's worst enemy.
 
-- JR
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, November 12, 2005 1:34
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Bruces' sale and Heritage.

Ron and all,

I've expressed these same opinions both on MOPO and on the late Movie Poster
Talk about shilling many times.  You cannot be run up if you exercise your own discipline
in bidding.  Decide what you are willing / want to pay ahead of time and stick to your plan.
Because you cannot control all this other stuff.  It's the only way to buy something for the
price you want at auction.  There is no other way.  

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