We've all been quoted in an eBay auction!
braddick
Posts: 23,998 ✭✭✭✭✭
Read the fun. We've been quoted and our comments used to support an auction: 1370986789.
peacockcoins
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Comments
morris <><
ps, that guy sounds like the coolest
** I would take a shack on the Rock over a castle in the sand !! **
Don't take life so seriously...nobody gets out alive.
ALL VALLEY COIN AND JEWELRY
28480 B OLD TOWN FRONT ST
TEMECULA, CA 92590
(951) 757-0334
www.allvalleycoinandjewelry.com
peacockcoins
I'm not a fan of toning in general but that's an exceptionally nice piece. Not five digit nice but nice enough that I would add it to my collection if I had the chance, and most of my pieces are blast white.
09/07/2006
I noticed that.
He quoted me as "Toningintheblood showed this coin to me two Long Beaches ago and the color is stunning." BUT he left out the rest of what I said: If it is AT it is a good job. If it is real it's too thick at some parts where the colors merge and it won't get holdered. It's still love to have it, but not at $12,000."
BTW: Anaconda/Adrian is a lawyer so I'm sure he know about the legality of quoting us. Not that I care he can quote me all he likes.
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etexmike
:-)
were quoted in the auction appear to be "endorsing" this ANACS Roanoke. I wonder
if that's a good idea? I'm sure some bd members don't even know yet that they are being
quoted in an ad like that.
<< <i>Sneaky slimy lawyers always twist your words around, what else is new? >>
Or, Andaconda's version: "Sneaky, slimy Forum members, aways thinking they're getting their words twisted around. So, what else is new?"
peacockcoins
Because just because you say something in public doesn't make it not your work. If I wrote a book and read it in public would someone be able to pub;lish the book without my permission since I "read it in public"? Of course not. I'm not saying that he did anything wrong, but I'm sure there are some members that would have appreciated being asked before being quoted. I would have also prefered to have my entire quote quoted or none at all.
peacockcoins
Dragon
The seller is a true sheister, and a disgrace to the hobby.
PS: would you allow him to be a matchmaker to find you a wife (husband)? Why shouldn't we trust him? The wife would be guaranteed to be real, no makeup, no plastic surgery, etc. Just trust him. And trust the whole matchmaking community that he's for real and upfront (at least trust those he has selected to quote, because nobody else even had an opposing opinion!!!).
"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." -Luke 11:9
"Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD: And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might." -Deut. 6:4-5
"For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the LORD is our king; He will save us." -Isaiah 33:22
"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." -Luke 11:9
"Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD: And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might." -Deut. 6:4-5
"For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the LORD is our king; He will save us." -Isaiah 33:22
<< <i>Because just because you say something in public doesn't make it not your work. If I wrote a book and read it in public would someone be able to pub;lish the book without my permission since I "read it in public"? Of course not. I'm not saying that he did anything wrong, but I'm sure there are some members that would have appreciated being asked before being quoted. I would have also prefered to have my entire quote quoted or none at all. >>
wrong, if you don't copyright your work it's fair game.
<< <i>Greg's right. Altough probably within the legal confines of the law, it is unethical to quote someone out of context. It's funny, the way it was done here, but also a bit sad that it was done at all to market a coin. >>
braddick, while many cops have a terrific understanding of criminal law their eyes glaze over like a dead fish when quized on the civil code and common law. gereg is wrong.
peeps are responible for what they say and can't be taken out of context if they didn't say it in the first place. if anyone was offended, perhaps they should be more sustinct when reducing they're thoughts into writing.
these boards are akin to standing around on the street corner talking loudly. there are no privledges.
i now return his thread to the misguided rantings of the unknowng.
Sorry, but you're 100% wrong. You do not need to copyright your work in order for it to be protected. Check the law. Your work has protection the minute you create it.
Basically you're saying that if I write a book which I don't bother to have copyrighted and I leave it on a public bench then someone can take that book and use it for their personal gain because I didn't copyright it and it was in public.
I now return you to your common sense.
in the copyright law there is a concept known as the "fair use" doctrine which allows one author to quote the words of another if the use is limited in scope and would not infringe upon the rights, financial or otherwise, of the previous writer. it in no way affects any copyright an author has in his own work, merely protects another author from referencing a previous work in a way that does not materially damage the first author.
bringing the quote into the realm of advertising, as Adrian arguably did could perhaps create additional problems, but in this case the damages one could prove would be very hard to define. (loss of reputation or income, for instance).
i would guess that most people who view his auctions enjoy the description almost as much as the coins themselves (seeing as how we surely can't afford these things). he is an intelligent wordsmith with not even a neutral feedback, let alone a negative, out of hundreds of transactions and to have compared his auctions to the phony IHP is an insult that requires nothing more than a mere nod.
as far as i'm concerned the only thing wrong with the quotations were the unfortunate omission of some very important ...'s. these little three periods in a row have traditionally been used to clearly enunciate where and when quotations have been edited. this was not done in a couple of quotes and did, in my opinion, materially misrepresent what the original author was attempting to express.
the auction has now been relisted, with no mention of the thread whatsoever. a full, and seemingly very sincere apology has been made (although not acknowledged by some who have obviously already read it) by the "offender." the seller has also restructured his return policy for this coin from "the best in the business" to 90 days. he has also offered the buyer an immediate $2,000 buyback for service cross (although i admit this could be seen as a bit self serving).
i think all who impugned the mans integrity owe the guy at least an acknowledgement of his apology, if not praise for his obvious attempt at making this, as well as all his auctions, right.
zenny
I like many of you was not happy to have something I posted here used for commercial purposes. Since my statement was public and my real name was not used, I am not sure that any intellectual property was misappropriated, but I will leave that to the IP lawyers to pontificate on.
The real commercial value of my opinion about Adrain's Roanoke is zero--and therein lies the rub.
I was dismayed over having something I said on this board used in a way that could be interpreted as impliing that (1) I endorsed the coin or the value asked, and (2) my statement was authorative in some respect and therefor was something that a propsective buyer could rely upon. In fact, I am not a professional or an expert and no one should rely on my opinion in purchasing a coin. As a I stated in my posts about the coin, I think that collectors who have $12K to play with will make their own investigation and rely upon their expertise and that of their trusted advisors, if any. But I still was uncomfortable with something I said here being used to hype the sale of someone's merchandise.