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Is "sniping" ethical (and does it help/hurt buyers/sellers)??

...and do you expect that you can build long-lasting relationships with sellers/auctioneers if you practice sniping their auctions?

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  • MikeInFLMikeInFL Posts: 10,188 ✭✭✭✭
    Of course it is. As long as it is within the rules of the auction, I see no valid argument to the contrary...Mike
    Collector of Large Cents, US Type, and modern pocket change.
  • LucyBopLucyBop Posts: 14,001 ✭✭✭


    << <i>...and do you expect that you can build long-lasting relationships with sellers/auctioneers if you practice sniping their auctions? >>



    if there is a coin i must have, anything is ethical, including casteration.
    imageBe Bop A Lula!!
    "Senorita HepKitty"
    "I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
  • HyperionHyperion Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭
    sniping is a system hack and I believe it discourages open bidding. I hope ebay takes measures to prevent the practice.

    why do you think in live auctions the auctioneer says "fair warning, fair warning".

    IMHO, if there's a bid, add 30 seconds to allow for responses from other bidders.


  • << <i>Is "sniping" ethical?? >>




    yes


  • I don't like sniping; but the easy response is to say to just bid the most that you are willing to pay.

    (Of course, I like to go bargain hunting myself, so I don't follow my own advice.)

    I like the idea of adding time for every bid.
    Robert Getty - Lifetime project to complete the finest collection of 1872 dated coins.
  • RussRuss Posts: 48,514 ✭✭✭


    << <i>Is "sniping" ethical?? >>



    Yes.



    << <i>...and do you expect that you can build long-lasting relationships with sellers/auctioneers if you practice sniping their auctions? >>



    Most sellers like snipers. I sure do.



    << <i>sniping is a system hack and I believe it discourages open bidding. I hope ebay takes measures to prevent the practice. >>



    You're funny.

    Russ, NCNE


  • << <i>sniping is a system hack and I believe it discourages open bidding. I hope ebay takes measures to prevent the practice. >>



    Why ? image



    << <i>why do you think in live auctions the auctioneer says "fair warning, fair warning". >>



    to alert that the auction will be closing. what else ?image



    << <i>IMHO, if there's a bid, add 30 seconds to allow for responses from other bidders. >>



    ya right, an auction would never end if that was implemented.

    I think most sellers like snipers.


  • HyperionHyperion Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭
    the auction would eventually end when someone truly met the top dollar price.

    I consider that POV to be short sighted.
  • Sniping, Cherrypicking, AT, Shorting....

    It's all good when $$ can be made.

    image
    know what you don't know.

    hi, i'm tom.

    i do not doctor coins like some who post in here.



  • << <i>the auction would eventually end when someone truly met the top dollar price.

    I consider that POV to be short sighted. >>



    oh, so the auction would end when a pre-determined value has been reached? Doesn't sound like an auction to me.

  • Ebay auctions continue to evloe into "Vickrey Auctions," sealed bids where the highest bid wins at the second highest price. Interesting article on the subject:

    http://www.agorics.com/Library/Auctions/auction5.html
  • Think of sniping as an effecient form of bidding. As a seller would you rather have a snipe bid or no bid at all?
    Mike Bottos
    coinpage.com
  • keetskeets Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
    sniping is a system hack and I believe it discourages open bidding. I hope ebay takes measures to prevent the practice.
    why do you think in live auctions the auctioneer says "fair warning, fair warning".
    IMHO, if there's a bid, add 30 seconds to allow for responses from other bidders.


    absolute nonsense, did you think before you hit the Reply button or forget to edit the above???

    consider that Yahoo Auctions climbed right to the top of the heap with that unique feature of adding five minutes to an auction when a snipe was made!!!! Yahoo gives the name Sleepy Hollow credibility!!!!image also, it just doesn't work comparing a live auction to eBay.....................apples and oranges. my experience with eBay is that for the most part if i really want to win an item, i need to be present at the end of the listing with my finger on the trigger to snipe. entering a bid before the end of the auction and then checking back when it's over means one of two things-----i pay a higher price than i should or i lose.

    BTW, sniping is totally ethical on an "eBay" level because it is within the rules, though it might be unethical on a personal level. also, i doubt sellers care how the highest bid is obtained, i know i don't. and i certainly am not looking to build any relationships with eBay sellers. i'm only interested in winning their items and in how their customer service is performed.
  • Under the current rules, its fair and legal. Why should I give a bidder a few hours to decide he wants to pay more. He should bid his maximum and then they wouldn't have to worry. I always wait till the end.

    However, it's not good for the seller as it doesn't allow them to get the highest price. I agree that there should be at least a 30 second gap after the last bid before the auction closes even if it extends the end time. My guess is that Ebay knows this but it's not in the software and there no additional profit to them so why change it.

    Of course there are some here who think it should stay this way, they can justify anything that works in thier favor.
  • HeywoodHeywood Posts: 1,246 ✭✭✭
    Yes- of course it is.

    My definition of sniping is me staying up and constantly refreshing the screen to enter my high bid at the last moment.
    I don't like sniping software, but that doesn't make it un-ethical.

    I still remeber my first E-bay auction ( Bidder) I was updating as it got down to the end, and all of a sudden bids came in from everywhere- What was going on! Went from High bidder with 30 seconds left to confused underbidder by 8 people. lesson one - snipe or be sniped.

    I also always hated the " give it you best bid and forget it" response, because getting it for below what I would pay is the goal.

    If E-bay wanted to generate the most $ for their sellers ( and fees for them) they would extend every auction for 30 seconds after the last bid. That would get the sellers the highest prices, and would reduce sniping.

    I have been on all sides of this situation-
    Item high bid of about $40, worth 90-100 retail. put in snipe of $80.00-

    auction 1 closes at 40.50- won a great deal
    auction 2 closes @ 80.01- lost out by a penny. ( PO'ed, because the coins you miss start to look nicer)
    Auction 3 closes out @ $80.00 Someone else tried to sniped @ 79.99. won but feel like I lost ( Even though I was willing to pay 80, I didn't want to have to)


    A witty saying proves nothing- Voltaire (1694 - 1778)



    An error does not become truth by reason of multiplied propagation, nor

    does the truth become error because nobody will see it. -Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948)
  • pharmerpharmer Posts: 8,355


    << <i>why do you think in live auctions the auctioneer says "fair warning, fair warning". >>




    And ebay having an end point of a listing displayed and counted down to the second is the same thing, only better and more precise, in that the guy yelling fair warning may miscontrue someone digging out some ear wax as an intention to bid and delaying the endimage

    -------------------------

    image
    Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

    Apropos of the coin posse/aka caca: "The longer he spoke of his honor, the tighter I held to my purse."

    image
  • I know for a fact eBay loves sniping because it makes them money and money is goood.



    Note for myself: ( never try to outbid LucyBop) ouch!
  • Steve27Steve27 Posts: 13,275 ✭✭✭
    "Is "sniping" ethical??"

    Yes, and not sniping is stupid.
    "It's far easier to fight for principles, than to live up to them." Adlai Stevenson
  • flaminioflaminio Posts: 5,664 ✭✭✭


    << <i>consider that Yahoo Auctions climbed right to the top of the heap with that unique feature of adding five minutes to an auction when a snipe was made!!!! Yahoo gives the name Sleepy Hollow credibility!!!!image >>

    Overstock auctions also do auction extensions, with similar raging success.

    I lurv my snipers image
  • Sorry to say that sniping has become a ritual for me now. Most vammers have been bidding the heck out of auctions that I have been bidding on recently and rather than alert anyone, I don't place bids anymore.

    I don't know if it is because of my bids, but I have been winning 79% more coins by sniping.
    This is a very dumb ass thread. - Laura Sperber - Tuesday January 09, 2007 11:16 AM image

    Hell, I don't need to exercise.....I get enough just pushing my luck.
  • fishcookerfishcooker Posts: 3,446 ✭✭

    and do you expect that you can build long-lasting relationships with sellers/auctioneers if you practice sniping their auctions?

    I could not care less about developing and building a long-lasting relationship with an ebay seller.
  • messydeskmessydesk Posts: 20,318 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Sniping is no less ethical than paying someone to represent you at a live auction. It is also a way of keeping people from stalking your bids.

    The reason eBay is set up to encourage sniping is because it must make more money for them than indeterminant auction end times would. It's usually more conventient to submit a sealed bid ahead of the end of the auction than it is to sit around and watch an auction end, especially if you are interested in several lots with roughly the same end time. Also, every bid placed through a sniping site generates revenue for eBay through their pay-per-use web services API. I'm surprised eBay doesn't have "place a sealed bid for a fee" option in their auctions. All sealed bids would be stamped with the end time of the auction.
  • Sniping seems to tick off bargain basement buyers the most. It's very easy to "snipe" other buyers who don't want to spend an extra couple of dollars on something that's old and limited or new but sold out at the mint. I've rarely been sniped when I've set my set max bid at a level that's not outrageous but takes into account market forces and how much I really want the product. I've sniped so many cheapskates it ain't funny. So cheapskates do have something to moan about regarding snipersimage Just cough up your dough and watch the snipes go away.............image
  • mercurydimeguymercurydimeguy Posts: 4,625 ✭✭✭✭

    Do you think it would help or hurt the capital markets if every broker/trader entered their bid/buy order at 3:59:56 PM Eastern Time?

  • LucyBopLucyBop Posts: 14,001 ✭✭✭


    << <i>Do you think it would help or hurt the capital markets if every broker/trader entered their bid/buy order at 3:59:56 PM Eastern Time? >>



    and who cares about that?

    imageBe Bop A Lula!!
    "Senorita HepKitty"
    "I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
  • My wife is a snipe queen- last night- got one with 1 second left. She is gooood.

  • mercurydimeguymercurydimeguy Posts: 4,625 ✭✭✭✭
    <<and who cares about that?>>

    Companies and people who buy and sell securities would probably care about that, and companies and people who own mutual funds might also care...




  • ziggy29ziggy29 Posts: 18,668 ✭✭✭
    I used to wonder about that when I did mostly buying. But when I started selling more, the more I appreciated snipers.

    And these days, like the system or not, the way it's set up it's pretty foolhardy NOT to snipe, IMO.


  • << <i>Do you think it would help or hurt the capital markets if every broker/trader entered their bid/buy order at 3:59:56 PM Eastern Time? >>



    I thought we were talking about timed auctions not an open bid/ask system. As a seller, if you don't like the idea of a timed auction don't sell on eBay, just put the item up for sale on your website (your ask price) and wait to see if you get any bids.

    Mike Bottos
    coinpage.com
  • mercurydimeguymercurydimeguy Posts: 4,625 ✭✭✭✭


    << <i>

    << <i>Do you think it would help or hurt the capital markets if every broker/trader entered their bid/buy order at 3:59:56 PM Eastern Time? >>



    I thought we were talking about timed auctions not an open bid/ask system. As a seller, if you don't like the idea of a timed auction don't sell on eBay, just put the item up for sale on your website (your ask price) and wait to see if you get any bids. >>


    I'm attempting to better understand if last second bidding helps or hurts buyers/sellers, so it seems like drawing a parallel to a time-tested marketplace might help.

    I just changed the thread title to be a bit more representative of the type of input that would be helpful.

    Thanks!


  • xbobxbob Posts: 1,979
    Unless they add silent bidding (i.e. everyone enters their max and we don't know the result until "hammer time") I will continue to use a sniping program. I do think it's ethical since it gives you a chance at obtaining the item at or below your true max. It's nice having no time left to change your mind and bid higher. It keeps me from getting caught up in the momentum and pushing my buy price higher than I want to. If my max bid wasn't high enough, bravo to the winner for bidding higher.

    I like it on sales too. It's a thrill to see your item double in selling price in the last minute of the auction.
    -Bob
    collections: Maryland related coins & exonumia, 7070 Type set, and Video Arcade Tokens.
    The Low Budget Y2K Registry Set


  • << <i>

    << <i>

    << <i>Do you think it would help or hurt the capital markets if every broker/trader entered their bid/buy order at 3:59:56 PM Eastern Time? >>



    I thought we were talking about timed auctions not an open bid/ask system. As a seller, if you don't like the idea of a timed auction don't sell on eBay, just put the item up for sale on your website (your ask price) and wait to see if you get any bids. >>


    I'm attempting to better understand if last second bidding helps or hurts buyers/sellers, so it seems like drawing a parallel to a time-tested marketplace might help.

    I just changed the thread title to be a bit more representative of the type of input that would be helpful.

    Thanks! >>



    Oh. I think that for items that are more homogeneous like a share in a company or an ounce of gold an open bid/ask system provides better liquidity and a fairer price, but when items are not homogeneous like a toned morgan dollar a timed system provides better liquidity (i.e. a faster transaction) but not necessarily a fairer price.
    Mike Bottos
    coinpage.com
  • DMWJRDMWJR Posts: 6,046 ✭✭✭✭✭
    How do I feel about sniping? Nothing but recoil!
    Doug
  • PreussenPreussen Posts: 2,307 ✭✭✭


    << <i>I like it on sales too. It's a thrill to see your item double in selling price in the last minute of the auction. >>



    I agree; mine did that......once image - Preussen
    "Illegitimis non carborundum" -General Joseph Stilwell. See my auctions
  • flaminioflaminio Posts: 5,664 ✭✭✭


    << <i>I'm attempting to better understand if last second bidding helps or hurts buyers/sellers, so it seems like drawing a parallel to a time-tested marketplace might help. >>

    The previously posted link about Vickrey auctions is very educational about this. (Link; googling "vickrey" returns more useful information.) Rampant sniping turns eBay auctions into de facto Vickrey auctions, which have been proven to be most efficient for both buyers and sellers.
  • LucyBopLucyBop Posts: 14,001 ✭✭✭


    << <i><<and who cares about that?>>

    Companies and people who buy and sell securities would probably care about that, and companies and people who own mutual funds might also care... >>



    and phooooooooooey on all of them, they have nothing to do with me sniping a needed coin on ebay.
    imageBe Bop A Lula!!
    "Senorita HepKitty"
    "I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
  • BigD5BigD5 Posts: 3,433
    Sniping is ethical. Whether you bid at the beginning, middle or end of the auction, if you bid enough, you will win.

    The second part of your question is a different animal though and it can be expanded to include dealers in general, not simply online venues.

    Many established dealers I see on a regular basis note the dramatic drop-off in "regular" customers. They feel there is definitely more of a "mercenary" type buyer in the market today. By that I mean a buyer's loyalties lean more towards getting the cheapest price, as opposed to focusing on establishing and continuing a business relationship with a trusted few dealers.

    Most of the change in a collectors buying habits are being brought on by the many online oppurtunities to purchase coins.

    I don't see this trend ending soon, and I think this trend will spell the end of the brick and mortar coin shop as most of us know. You'll see pawn shops where you can trade in the bullion type items and an ever expanding online market to dispose of numismatic related items.

    If you're a price buyer, the internet is the place for you.

    If you are focusing on a certain segment or series, and you are looking for quality coins on a consistent basis, you should tie yourself in with dealers that focus in those respective areas. The fear with that commitment for some collectors is that they will pay "too much" for their coins. Good coins are worth good money and they will hold their value almost all the time, so "too much" isn't what it seems.



    BigD5
    LSCC#1864

    Ebay Stuff
  • MrHalfDimeMrHalfDime Posts: 3,440 ✭✭✭✭
    Is your problem with sniping WHEN I bid or WHAT I bid? Remember... if I snipe an item and win, it was not so much because I bid late in the auction, but because I bid MORE than you. Period. You could have placed a larger proxy bid, any time you wanted, if you really wanted the item. Don't criticise me merely for my timing. It was not my timing that won the lot. It was my maximim bid.

    Most criticism of sniping appears to be 'sour grapes' from people who were trying to find a bargain. Sniping, as has been said, is legal on eBay, is widely practiced, and is not likely to be discouraged by eBay. Besides, it is much less violent than castration.
    They that can give up essential Liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither Liberty nor safety. Benjamin Franklin
  • mercurydimeguymercurydimeguy Posts: 4,625 ✭✭✭✭


    << <i>Is your problem with sniping WHEN I bid or WHAT I bid? >>


    Steve, I don't have a problem with sniping, but apparently people feel quite passionate about this topic.


    <<Besides, it is much less violent than castration.>>

    Now that's a bit OT, isn't it?? image


  • "sniper"? I think the term is "HIGHEST BIDDER".
    The Accumulator - Dark Lloyd of the Sith

    image
  • There is 1 dealer on e-bay I do the opposite of a snipe on. They start the auction at what they would accept.
    I place a minimum bid and always get a second chance offer because they have multiples. It is a shame because I have been taught to bid low on their auctions.

    I hope their not listening.
  • MrHalfDimeMrHalfDime Posts: 3,440 ✭✭✭✭
    <<Besides, it is much less violent than castration.>>

    Now that's a bit OT, isn't it??

    Hey, I was just commenting on a previous post.
    They that can give up essential Liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither Liberty nor safety. Benjamin Franklin
  • HyperionHyperion Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭


    << <i>

    << <i>the auction would eventually end when someone truly met the top dollar price.

    I consider that POV to be short sighted. >>



    oh, so the auction would end when a pre-determined value has been reached? Doesn't sound like an auction to me. >>




    it would end when the last person put in thier top dollar they'd be willing to pay. like a real auction.
    how hard is this concept to understand ?
  • mercurydimeguymercurydimeguy Posts: 4,625 ✭✭✭✭

    If the consensus is that sniping is good for buyers/sellers, why do you think coin auction companies haven't embraced this and enabled this type of functionality for their internet only auctions?





  • << <i>Sorry to say that sniping has become a ritual for me now. Most vammers have been bidding the heck out of auctions that I have been bidding on recently and rather than alert anyone, I don't place bids..... >>



    I agree with you
    "location, location, location...eye appeal, eye appeal, eye appeal"
    My website
  • BigD5BigD5 Posts: 3,433


    << <i>If the consensus is that sniping is good for buyers/sellers, why do you think coin auction companies haven't embraced this and enabled this type of functionality for their internet only auctions? >>



    Most coin auction companies are looking to sell to floor bidders, that would be the major reason there.

    As far as internet auctions other than Ebay, there's Heritage and these IO auctions are a tiny segment of what they do and I'm not sure if they're that concerned over snipes with what is listed there.

    BigD5
    LSCC#1864

    Ebay Stuff
  • InYHWHWeTrustInYHWHWeTrust Posts: 1,451 ✭✭✭
    Sniping keeps me out of bidding wars and going over budget, passion/emotions vs. self-control
    Proxy sniping or software costs money but may be better protection from home PC problems, storms, etc.
    Early on in my ebay life, I tried some 'manual' sniping, once at 1AM closing time, and the lightning storm at 12:45AM finished off that endeavor!

    Don
    Do your best to avoid circular arguments, as it will help you reason better, because better reasoning is often a result of avoiding circular arguments.
  • JcarneyJcarney Posts: 3,154
    If it wasn't for my snipe, the seller would have to settle for less money for their item. As an occasional seller, I welcome snipers with open arms.

    John
    “When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.” — Benjamin Franklin


    My icon IS my coin. It is a gem 1949 FBL Franklin.
  • flaminioflaminio Posts: 5,664 ✭✭✭


    << <i>it would end when the last person put in thier top dollar they'd be willing to pay. like a real auction. >>

    What is a "real auction"? There are many different types of auctions. eBay's model is just as "real" as any other auction type.
  • RussRuss Posts: 48,514 ✭✭✭


    << <i>it would end when the last person put in thier top dollar they'd be willing to pay. like a real auction.
    how hard is this concept to understand ? >>



    "Real" auctions charge a buyer's fee for the privilege of bidding until the bidding ends. eBay is fine just the way it is.

    Russ, NCNE

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