What is the auction number?
On Fri, 26 Oct 2007 06:29:46 EDT, clockworkh...@aol.com wrote:
Greetings Learned Collectors:
There is an Edison Model E Home on eBay that has an impossible serial number,
994618. Since there were less than 410,000 Home Phonographs made, does
anyone have an idea
: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
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
I have a floor phonograph that is made in Canada (McLagan) and its serial
number is only 20961.
Maybe to lure in the newbie that has started to collect and does not have a
mentor to teach him about the scammers.
From the Desk of
Kat Hall
Executive Assistant to Ms. Smith (Publisher)
Review
Bruce,
If I hijacked your eBay account and changed notifications to my e-mail address,
would you get a notice of the change of personal information at your e-mail
address? The last power seller phishing e-mail I got looked so real to me the
only way I knew it was fake was by looking in My
I have the same functionality built into FireFox. No point in a stand alone
program. Might be a good
idea for the IE user though.
On Fri, 26 Oct 2007 13:38:07 -0400, Steven Medved wrote:
Dear Rich,
All of the passwords are stored on your computer and the program can be
installed as a
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
7 matches
Mail list logo