The Rolex Forums   The Rolex Watch

ROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEX


Go Back   Rolex Forums - Rolex Forum > General Topics > Open Discussion Forum

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 5 August 2020, 09:10 PM   #1
jeff hess
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Real Name: Jeffrey P Hess
Location: florida
Watch: Patek and Ball
Posts: 516
new Ebay rules to protect buyer and seller

I am really on the fence about this. Worried actually.

New rules for things over 2 grand with eBay are scarry.

I understand what they are trying to accomplish. They want to stop bogus sellers from selling crap and stop criminal buyers (or newbies being coerced from unknowledgeable friends )from claiming some minor thing makes it"not genuine" or "period correct" and demanding a partial refund.

But a couple of things stand out one part of the new rules says "If the item’s authenticity cannot be verified , the item is returned to the seller and a refund is issued." Ok so if the "thrid party authenticator" does not know that Rolec made bracelets in ARgentina and Mexico or that Rolex of Canada made cheap gold filled watches and watches with rhinestones in them your time and your buyers time are waisted"

And the part where it says "the watch may be given an ultrasonic bath" by the third party authenticator". Wait. What? Please tell me that the third party authenticator knows that water and watches don't mix...right? and that a snap=back vintage will NOT do well in an ultrasonic.

And "if the third party authenticator" deems your watch counterfeit you agree it will be destroyed. What??? We have sold over 100 million dollars on ebay and this is not an everyday occurrence but we have had ebay shut down an dauciton because they were informed that a watch was fake (usually Argentina made genuine bracelets) only to prove to them that it was genuine. So if some third party dude annoints your obscure vintage watch with genuine Mexican or argentinian braclet or (as happen to us once) a Tru-beat (buyer took to authozied Rolex dealer who said "Rolexs do not "tick" like that... fake). then the third party authenticator simply destroys it?

Don't get me wrong, I understand what eBay is trying to accomplish here.. But is seems like there may be hurdles.. Thoughts?https://pages.ebay.com/authenticity-...T5KD0qtpof0dbA
jeff hess is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5 August 2020, 10:31 PM   #2
tony5haw2013
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2020
Location: malta
Posts: 14
The good part is this will stop buyers buying a watch and asking to return only to send a fake or cheapo in its place as it has to get through the authenticator upon return.

Surely you will have some.say who the authentication is done by though? If not I wouldn't go near it.

Sent from my SM-N976B using Tapatalk
tony5haw2013 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5 August 2020, 11:56 PM   #3
jeff hess
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Real Name: Jeffrey P Hess
Location: florida
Watch: Patek and Ball
Posts: 516
Quote:
Originally Posted by tony5haw2013 View Post
The good part is this will stop buyers buying a watch and asking to return only to send a fake or cheapo in its place as it has to get through the authenticator upon return.

Surely you will have some.say who the authentication is done by though? If not I wouldn't go near it.

Sent from my SM-N976B using Tapatalk
that is another problem. eBay picked their "authentication partner". Will they destroy your watch on a whim? will the bathe in an ultrasonic your dress snap=back vintage Rolex?

Who are they? And this is not optional. If you sell or buy a watch over 2k your shipping will be slowed as it goes to this "third party" person.
jeff hess is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 6 August 2020, 12:04 AM   #4
herts9
"TRF" Member
 
herts9's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2016
Real Name: Brian
Location: Kentucky
Watch: 116610LN
Posts: 2,034
don't buy high-end watches on ebay
herts9 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 6 August 2020, 12:08 AM   #5
Watchflair
2024 SubLV41 Pledge Member
 
Watchflair's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2012
Real Name: Jim
Location: Westchester NY
Watch: Love em all
Posts: 5,920
I will absolutely never sell a watch on eBay ever again - did so for years and had an incredibly terrible experience that required me to hold them to their terms of use and take them to arbitration. Needless to say they clearly didn't know what they were talking about in terms of their own user agreement and the law.

Add the above to the mix and it is a recipe for disaster.

TRF's classified section just went up in value in my opinion.
Watchflair is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 6 August 2020, 01:39 AM   #6
101031-28
"TRF" Member
 
101031-28's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: USA
Watch: 1665
Posts: 4,764
Yikes! I have been on ebay since 1999. Sad to see how it went from a safe platform for buying/selling to one with high risk for scams. As a result, I choose not to sell anything of value on it anymore. Too many dishonest buyers trying to use their system to scam honest sellers. Thank you for the info, Jeff. I see what they are trying to accomplish but as a seller that would be just too much headache for me to go through.
__________________
He could not just wear a watch. It had to be a Rolex.

Ian Fleming
101031-28 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 6 August 2020, 02:13 AM   #7
HERITAGE82
"TRF" Member
 
HERITAGE82's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: South Florida
Posts: 3,439
This is a massive headache for sellers and buyers. Glad you brought this to my attention!
__________________
- Rolex Explorer - 214270
- Tudor Black Bay - 79230B
- Tudor Chronograph - 79270P
- Breitling Chronomat - 10th Anniv.
- Huguenin Freres Speedmaster Prototype
HERITAGE82 is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 6 August 2020, 03:37 AM   #8
330ci
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: michigan
Posts: 2,346
what's absolutely hilarious is I was paid $110 to consult on this system from a third party company. They made it sound like it would be an additional protection you could use, not something you had to use.


I sold a watch on there for $2k on the 13th of last month and they held the funds for 21 days, I assume it's due to this new system coming into place.
330ci is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 6 August 2020, 04:12 AM   #9
Burlington
"TRF" Member
 
Burlington's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 5,644
So does the watch go from seller to authentication then onwards to buyer ?
__________________
“My tastes are simple; I am easily satisfied with the best.”

― Winston S. Churchill
Burlington is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 6 August 2020, 09:11 AM   #10
jeff hess
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Real Name: Jeffrey P Hess
Location: florida
Watch: Patek and Ball
Posts: 516
Quote:
Originally Posted by Burlington View Post
So does the watch go from seller to authentication then onwards to buyer ?
yes! Which is a GREAT idea! This whole idea is GREAT! The two sticking points are the "give your watch a bath in an ultrasonic" (just dumb) and the authenticator can confiscate your watch.

The idea is a great one! But those two items are non-starters.


Jeff, glad ebay is pro-active... but needs tweaking.
jeff hess is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 6 August 2020, 12:15 PM   #11
MoosicPa
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: May 2010
Real Name: Don
Location: Moosic PA
Watch: King Midas & Subma
Posts: 1,159
Quote:
Originally Posted by herts9 View Post
don't buy high-end watches on ebay
__________________
NAWCC Member

"Nothing is to too beautiful, nothing is too expensive" Ettore Bugatti.
MoosicPa is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7 August 2020, 02:09 AM   #12
330ci
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: michigan
Posts: 2,346
Quote:
Originally Posted by CraKaLaCKiN View Post
I don't know that legally another person can confiscate someone else's property. Fake or not.
i'm guessing there's somewhere in the user agreement that says you allow them to destroy your watch if they deem it fake


on the other hand, what happens when they verify a watch and you send it in to get it serviced and parts turn out to be fake, who bears the responsibility to the customer?
330ci is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7 August 2020, 02:42 AM   #13
morglaw
Banned
 
Join Date: Feb 2020
Real Name: Morgan
Location: Denver
Posts: 53
Quote:
Originally Posted by 101031-28 View Post
Yikes! I have been on ebay since 1999. Sad to see how it went from a safe platform for buying/selling to one with high risk for scams. As a result, I choose not to sell anything of value on it anymore. Too many dishonest buyers trying to use their system to scam honest sellers. Thank you for the info, Jeff. I see what they are trying to accomplish but as a seller that would be just too much headache for me to go through.
True, that's a shame. But sadly a lot of sites are struggling in this period, a lot are dying or having crisis.
morglaw is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7 August 2020, 08:13 AM   #14
Polarexplorerii
"TRF" Member
 
Polarexplorerii's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: SA,TX
Watch: 16570,BLNR,116610
Posts: 2,241
Quote:
Originally Posted by herts9 View Post
don't buy high-end watches on ebay
I agree 100%
Polarexplorerii is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7 August 2020, 08:23 AM   #15
330ci
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: michigan
Posts: 2,346
Quote:
Originally Posted by Polarexplorerii View Post
I agree 100%
The OP is probably one of the highest volume vintage dealers on EBay, doesn’t really make sense for him to go elsewhere id imagine when he has a huge following there already
330ci is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7 August 2020, 10:46 AM   #16
jeff hess
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Real Name: Jeffrey P Hess
Location: florida
Watch: Patek and Ball
Posts: 516
Quote:
Originally Posted by 330ci View Post
The OP is probably one of the highest volume vintage dealers on EBay, doesn’t really make sense for him to go elsewhere id imagine when he has a huge following there already

This is true. We consolidated our early old 1990's mailing list and our old model of doing 15 watch shows per year into on-line with ebay in about 1997. It worked well and worked REAL WELL when we became Sothebys'com associates and then when Sothebys.com partnered with eBay we REALLY rocked.

The Sotheby's left eBay and we continued. Our long time Italian and Asian customers from the late 80's to early 90's continue to buy from us to this day, but instead of at shows ...on eBay.

eBay is a powerful platform. But again, those two "Sticking points" need addressed IMHO. No well-thought out.

I admire and give kudos to eBay for making an attempt to circumvent bad buyers and bad sellers with this program though.
jeff hess is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7 August 2020, 10:59 AM   #17
Case61
2024 SubLV41 Pledge Member
 
Case61's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Tucson, Az
Posts: 1,145
Quote:
Originally Posted by jeff hess View Post
This is true. We consolidated our early old 1990's mailing list and our old model of doing 15 watch shows per year into on-line with ebay in about 1997. It worked well and worked REAL WELL when we became Sothebys'com associates and then when Sothebys.com partnered with eBay we REALLY rocked.

The Sotheby's left eBay and we continued. Our long time Italian and Asian customers from the late 80's to early 90's continue to buy from us to this day, but instead of at shows ...on eBay.

eBay is a powerful platform. But again, those two "Sticking points" need addressed IMHO. No well-thought out.

I admire and give kudos to eBay for making an attempt to circumvent bad buyers and bad sellers with this program though.
I hope this "duh" question is okay. Is your outfit Hess Fine Auctions? I've bought several items on EBay from there, mostly pocket watches on the lower end of the scale. I've always been impressed with the quality of the items sold, accuracy of description, and service. (An unsolicited endorsement, and I have no connection other than as a buyer).
Case61 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7 August 2020, 12:41 PM   #18
MILGAUSS88
"TRF" Member
 
MILGAUSS88's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2014
Location: mississippi river
Posts: 3,194
Seems like a good ideal that will be impossible to implement.
They must think The Real Real is there competition in this field. I think most of it has gone to Chrono24 or private websites.

So, are the autheniticators going to open the watch and inspect the movement? It's not much of an authentication if they don't. In that case the are going to have to be a watchmaker as well as an expert on watches. Those two things are not always mutual.

Are they going to open a new watch sealed in its original box?
Are they going to open up brand new watches?

If ebay is opening up watches and they scratch them are they going to take responsibility for it? The new buyers are pretty anal. You see photos of nicks under microscopes on this site.
You hear enough complaints about how watches were returned from RSC or Patek, what watch experts is ebay going to hire that are better than can be found by Rolex or Patek?


On vintage watches the gaskets disintegrate when open you open up the back. Are they going to replace them? If particles fall into the movement are they going to remove them?

Ebay sells 200 wristwatches over $2,000 every day. And that is without the Christmas rush. If you look at one every half hour, it would take 13 watchmakers.

It is not going to be easy to find that many highly skilled watchmakers. Are they just going to hire people off the street like The Real Real and train them?
How are they going to handle a holiday rush? Add 65 watchmakers? Have a back up of 2 weeks?

I think this whole plan will fall under its own weight.
MILGAUSS88 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7 August 2020, 09:34 PM   #19
330ci
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: michigan
Posts: 2,346
Quote:
Originally Posted by MILGAUSS88 View Post
Seems like a good ideal that will be impossible to implement.
They must think The Real Real is there competition in this field. I think most of it has gone to Chrono24 or private websites.

So, are the autheniticators going to open the watch and inspect the movement? It's not much of an authentication if they don't. In that case the are going to have to be a watchmaker as well as an expert on watches. Those two things are not always mutual.

Are they going to open a new watch sealed in its original box?
Are they going to open up brand new watches?

If ebay is opening up watches and they scratch them are they going to take responsibility for it? The new buyers are pretty anal. You see photos of nicks under microscopes on this site.
You hear enough complaints about how watches were returned from RSC or Patek, what watch experts is ebay going to hire that are better than can be found by Rolex or Patek?


On vintage watches the gaskets disintegrate when open you open up the back. Are they going to replace them? If particles fall into the movement are they going to remove them?

Ebay sells 200 wristwatches over $2,000 every day. And that is without the Christmas rush. If you look at one every half hour, it would take 13 watchmakers.

It is not going to be easy to find that many highly skilled watchmakers. Are they just going to hire people off the street like The Real Real and train them?
How are they going to handle a holiday rush? Add 65 watchmakers? Have a back up of 2 weeks?

I think this whole plan will fall under its own weight.
it's likely that they will have an office where the watches get shipped, and then they're verified by a 3rd party company. There were companies when I was in the pawn business who you would send pictures too and they would verify authenticity based off of those photos. (this was done within minutes, as customers don't like to wait) So I assume it will be a bunch of idiots taking pictures of watches, sending those in for 3rd party verification and it will be done fairly quickly. With what sense of accuracy, that's a different question.
330ci is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 3 September 2020, 09:53 PM   #20
jeff hess
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Real Name: Jeffrey P Hess
Location: florida
Watch: Patek and Ball
Posts: 516
Quote:
Originally Posted by MILGAUSS88 View Post
Seems like a good ideal that will be impossible to implement.
They must think The Real Real is there competition in this field. I think most of it has gone to Chrono24 or private websites.

So, are the autheniticators going to open the watch and inspect the movement? It's not much of an authentication if they don't. In that case the are going to have to be a watchmaker as well as an expert on watches. Those two things are not always mutual.

Are they going to open a new watch sealed in its original box?
Are they going to open up brand new watches?

If ebay is opening up watches and they scratch them are they going to take responsibility for it? The new buyers are pretty anal. You see photos of nicks under microscopes on this site.
You hear enough complaints about how watches were returned from RSC or Patek, what watch experts is ebay going to hire that are better than can be found by Rolex or Patek?


On vintage watches the gaskets disintegrate when open you open up the back. Are they going to replace them? If particles fall into the movement are they going to remove them?

Ebay sells 200 wristwatches over $2,000 every day. And that is without the Christmas rush. If you look at one every half hour, it would take 13 watchmakers.

It is not going to be easy to find that many highly skilled watchmakers. Are they just going to hire people off the street like The Real Real and train them?
How are they going to handle a holiday rush? Add 65 watchmakers? Have a back up of 2 weeks?

I think this whole plan will fall under its own weight.
-------------------------------------------


Turns out that the authenticator they picked is beyond reproach. After we found out who they piced we were very very relieved. the best of the best! suriesed they were able to snag this company. But your points are VERY well taken. I totally TRUST this companies' ability to open my watches. And to not scratch a watch. And to replace gaskets. but your "logjam" worries are eye opening. The Christmast rush? when sellers are overnighting expensive watches 3 to 5 days before Christmas? This would tax even the best. But my faith in this company (the authenticator) is solid. We shall see.
jeff hess is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 3 September 2020, 10:06 PM   #21
Xenon
Banned
 
Join Date: May 2020
Location: USA
Posts: 1,136
I used to buy Rolex on ebay in the 2000's from DavidSW
Xenon is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 4 September 2020, 09:56 PM   #22
RobertoCleveland
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: Cleveland, OH
Posts: 11
I recently purchased an 1803 DD which went through eBay’s “verification” process:

1) The authenticator listed 18038 as the model on the certificate, when the case clearly had 1803 stamped on it and the item was listed as an 1803.
2) The authenticator obviously did not verify the seller’s claim of “time tested”, as my timegrapher showed a very non-COSC range of -12 to -21s/d.
3) The authenticator must not have opened the case to verify the claim of original movement, as the bridge was obviously a replacement from a 1570/1575 caliber (stamped with “1570”). This model DD would have a 1556 or 1555 stamp. Apparently the bridges are
interchangeable, but another huge miss.

It was as if the eBay “authenticator” did nothing more than look at the serial number, take a photo, and rubber stamp it.
RobertoCleveland is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5 September 2020, 12:45 AM   #23
330ci
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: michigan
Posts: 2,346
Quote:
Originally Posted by RobertoCleveland View Post
I recently purchased an 1803 DD which went through eBay’s “verification” process:

1) The authenticator listed 18038 as the model on the certificate, when the case clearly had 1803 stamped on it and the item was listed as an 1803.
2) The authenticator obviously did not verify the seller’s claim of “time tested”, as my timegrapher showed a very non-COSC range of -12 to -21s/d.
3) The authenticator must not have opened the case to verify the claim of original movement, as the bridge was obviously a replacement from a 1570/1575 caliber (stamped with “1570”). This model DD would have a 1556 or 1555 stamp. Apparently the bridges are
interchangeable, but another huge miss.

It was as if the eBay “authenticator” did nothing more than look at the serial number, take a photo, and rubber stamp it.


I guess in their eyes, it’s all authentic, just not original.
330ci is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5 September 2020, 02:20 AM   #24
ReturningSon
"TRF" Member
 
ReturningSon's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: Sacremento
Watch: ALS, Rolex, Seiko
Posts: 158
Honestly, to trust ANY timepiece over a certain value to a "third party" vendor even related to eBay seems like a crazy idea to me. eBay is a fine platform to sell and purchase lower priced items but for sellers, as price goes up the risk sure does too and do not expect a single individual from eBay or PayPal to have your back. It almost seems as if eBay does want to make it so troublesome for individuals to sell high value items that way the site can focus on lower priced, mass-market goods very much the same way Amazon does. Conspiratorial I know but I would doubt that I am alone in thinking this.

I was a power seller on eBay specializing in high value transactions (avg $4-7K plus and all things in between, from bespoke suits to handmade musical instruments) for over 10 years. The platform literally steals money from sellers in certain cases. Like C24 and every other online platform, it markets itself as the safest place to conduct business and it somewhat is as long as both parties are honest. If one is not, the other is almost certainly out of their funds due to the policies implemented. eBay has had several CEOs and top level managers get fired/sued over this mismanagement and horrible policymaking. (All sorts of other shaninigans --executives legit threatening sellers, individuals critical of the site)

Private seller volume on the site has drastically decreased. OG sellers who built the site to what it is have long since fled. It has gotten so bad that now eBay is forced to use their own discretionary funds account to repay defrauded buyers/sellers while allowing the other (criminal) party to keep their money due to their own policies
.
I mean, class action lawsuits, a Wikipedia entry entitled "Criticism of eBay", and the dozens of articles highlighting the unfairness of the platform really go to highlight whats going on. I tell everyone; eBay is a fun place to play around on a smaller priced scale and its marginally safer as a buyer than as a seller but only marginally.

eBay should stop trying to emulate Amazon, institute a fair feedback system (gasp), let sellers place higher restrictive controls on who is allowed to bid on their product and instead of trying to craft some pseudo-authentication system, try to focus on enforcement of existing policies and refine punitive action for those who scam.

Sorry, didnt mean to go on eBay rant.
__________________
Lange 1815, Bulova Lunar Pilot, Rolex DeepSea, Rolex 1601 Linen Dial, Casio G-Shock
ReturningSon is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5 September 2020, 02:46 AM   #25
RobertoCleveland
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: Cleveland, OH
Posts: 11
Quote:
Originally Posted by 330ci View Post
I guess in their eyes, it’s all authentic, just not original.
Agreed, but one of the stated purposes of the authentication process is to verify the condition claims made by the seller, and the authenticator did not even perform the simplest steps to verify those claims (i.e. look at the model number stamp, measure on a timegrapher, etc.)
RobertoCleveland is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5 September 2020, 05:48 AM   #26
77T
2024 SubLV41 Pledge Member
 
77T's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2010
Real Name: PaulG
Location: Georgia
Posts: 42,024
The limited time allotted should have been able to catch the model number anomaly. They don’t do a timegrapher as there is no guarantee of performance.

“After an eBay authentication partner receives the watch and any collateral materials, including but not limited to box and papers, the partner will confirm the item is consistent with the listing title, description, and images. After, the partner will perform a multi-point physical authentication inspection. Finally, a security tag will be attached to the watch.”

And as for vintage watches, replacement parts are allowed.

Per the FAQ:
Are vintage watches eligible for the program?

A vintage watch is eligible for the Authenticity Guarantee program, if all eligibility criteria are met. Vintage watches which are verified as authentic by the third-party authentication partner may contain replacement parts that are not from the original manufacturer if the original manufacturer no longer makes that part. In addition, vintage watches with commonly replaced aftermarket parts, such as a strap, bracelet, crystal, spring bars, or gaskets will be eligible for the program.

And Custom Watches?

Customized watches are not eligible for the Authenticity Guarantee Program at this time. A watch will be defined as customized when original brand parts have been replaced with non-brand parts (with the exception of straps, bracelets, spring bars, and gaskets) or parts not original to the model, or components that are modified from the original design. An example of a customized watch may be a watch with a painted dial, aftermarket bezel or crystal, or engraving on the case.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
__________________


Does anyone really know what time it is?
77T is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5 September 2020, 05:58 AM   #27
TheVTCGuy
Banned
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Real Name: Paul
Location: San Diego
Watch: 126619LB
Posts: 21,540
Quote:
Originally Posted by herts9 View Post
don't buy high-end watches on ebay
I have to agree. If you choose not to purchase (or can’t because the fricken thing isn’t available!) from an AD, there are several reliable, fair and trustworthy dealers just on TRF alone. I am sure you could come to a reasonable agreement and buy with confidence.

I personally know and have done business with several of them and would be glad to give references if anyone wants.
TheVTCGuy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5 September 2020, 08:10 AM   #28
Burlington
"TRF" Member
 
Burlington's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 5,644
It’s a great idea in theory,

But in reality to check and confirm each element of a listing vs. the watch would take a long time.

They need some kind of tick box specification system to note things like:

- all original parts
- some non original but OEM parts
- replacement non OEM parts
- Etc.

Otherwise the wording of an advert can be too vague or misleading to be relied upon.
__________________
“My tastes are simple; I am easily satisfied with the best.”

― Winston S. Churchill
Burlington is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5 September 2020, 11:40 AM   #29
jeff hess
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Real Name: Jeffrey P Hess
Location: florida
Watch: Patek and Ball
Posts: 516
Ebay is simply checking does it match the listing and that it is not counterfeit.
jeff hess is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 5 September 2020, 12:03 PM   #30
Old Expat Beast
TRF Moderator & 2024 SubLV41 Patron
 
Old Expat Beast's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2013
Real Name: Adam
Location: Far East
Watch: Golden Tuna
Posts: 28,826
So is this only for USA deals? What happens if I'm in Hong Kong and buy a watch from Japan? Also, they must have dozens of these counterfeit checkers to keep things moving along, no?
__________________
_______________________
Old Expat Beast is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

OCWatches

Wrist Aficionado

My Watch LLC

WatchesOff5th

DavidSW Watches

Takuya Watches


*Banners Of The Month*
This space is provided to horological resources.





Copyright ©2004-2024, The Rolex Forums. All Rights Reserved.

ROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEX

Rolex is a registered trademark of ROLEX USA. The Rolex Forums is not affiliated with ROLEX USA in any way.