The end of online auctions?

Paco

CAGiversary!
Check out this message from ebay that they sent to members.

2009 is shaping up to be a historic year in Washington, DC and state capitals around America. We face the most challenging economy in decades, a new President, and strong majorities in Congress looking to take bold action. Some of the biggest companies in America are lobbying Congress to make their interests known. And make no mistake, not all of their interests are aligned with those of Internet entrepreneurs like you.
Here are three issues you need to be aware of:
Remote sales taxes
Today, eBay sellers are required to collect sales taxes only in states where they're located, not all of the states (and thousands of local jurisdictions) where their customers live. A number of states and big retailers are pushing to impose remote sales taxes on small Internet sellers. Big retailers know increased sales tax burdens will hurt their smaller competitors.

"Stolen Goods" legislation
Representatives of some of the nation's largest retailers recently claimed that many eBay sellers are listing stolen goods, a baseless charge that hurts every honest seller. Big retailers are pushing legislation to prohibit some eBay categories and require sellers to post their personal information and show receipts for the purchase of merchandise sold online.

Price fixing
A 2007 Supreme Court decision reversed the federal law that made price fixing an illegal anti-trust violation. Overturning this nearly 100-year-old precedent has empowered manufacturers and their large retail distributors to aggressively enforce minimum prices on the Internet, which hurts eBay sellers and the Internet as a whole
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All of these threats and more face small entrepreneurial retailers using the Internet to compete and survive in this economic climate. The eBay Government Relations team is working to protect eBay sellers from harmful legislation in both Congress and state capitals. But we need your help--and your voice--to make a major impact.
If you haven't joined Main Street yet, please join 250,000 other eBay users in protecting e-commerce. Together, we can make a big difference.
Sincerely,

Tod Cohen
Vice President, Government Relations

P.S. Main Street is free to join. Members receive approximately 4-6 emails per year. We'll only ask you to contact your elected officials on crucial issues. And, of course, you can opt out at any time.
 
If Ebay wants me to go to bat for them they will drastically lower their fees, give me back my right to leave negative fb when it is deserved, no longer allow npb to leave negative fb, get rid of best match, stop suspending sellers if their stars do not stay at an unrealistic level. A high volume seller can absorb a neg here or there but for a small seller one or two negs could mean a suspension.

If they will not do that I do not care. I have cut back selling on Ebay I used to sell a lot now I only list a few things here and there. I will not go to bat for tham so that Diamond Power sellers and Power Sellers can continue to make a killing on Ebay with their reduced fees, increased visibility and other advantages over the little guys.
 
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[quote name='CGH']If Ebay wants me to go to bat for them they will drastically lower their fees, give me back my right to leave negative fb when it is deserved, no longer allow npb to leave negative fb, get rid of best match, stop suspending sellers if their stars do not stay at an unrealistic level. A high volume seller can absorb a neg here or there but for a small seller one or two negs could mean a suspension.

If they will not do that I do not care. I have cut back selling on Ebay I used to sell a lot now I only list a few things here and there. I will not go to bat for tham so that Diamond Power sellers and Power Sellers can continue to make a killing on Ebay with their reduced fees, increased visibility and other advantages over the little guys.[/QUOTE]

i second that motion.
 
I don't use eBay anymore because of all of the reasons you stated. They turned their backs on the small scale sellers, so now we should turn our backs on them.
 
It's not the ebay thing I'm bothered about. It's the fact that they want to impliment it on more then just ebay. Think every safe haven auction site getting punched by this. That's what bothers me.
 
They've increased their fees 3 times last year. Games used to sell at 7% now its 15%. Good that they learn their lesson.
 
[quote name='CGH']If Ebay wants me to go to bat for them they will drastically lower their fees, give me back my right to leave negative fb when it is deserved, no longer allow npb to leave negative fb, get rid of best match, stop suspending sellers if their stars do not stay at an unrealistic level. A high volume seller can absorb a neg here or there but for a small seller one or two negs could mean a suspension.

If they will not do that I do not care. I have cut back selling on Ebay I used to sell a lot now I only list a few things here and there. I will not go to bat for tham so that Diamond Power sellers and Power Sellers can continue to make a killing on Ebay with their reduced fees, increased visibility and other advantages over the little guys.[/QUOTE]

Amen.
 
The auction format you all know and love without the fees, hassles and corporate greed - Oh, and it's dedicated to video games - http://www.ChaseTheChuckwagon.com.

Seriously guys, come on over and give it a try. We will be hitting 2,000 members in the next two months - 2,000 in one year on our anniversary, March 24th 2009. And just because we only have a small amount of members, don't worry. We have considerable traffic from people who are not yet members. When someone sees something they want, they register. So help us grow, get a few items listed and the buyers will come. Simple as that. We are averageing 150+ new members each month. Our items are all indexed on http://www.oodle.com so your items will appear there as well.

Come on over, list some things. Join our forums and promote your auctions, free yourself from Ebay. They don't want you anyway.

The Chuckwagon is the most successful video gaming auction site ever. Leave Ebay cold turkey -- it feels good!
 
[quote name='Paco']It's not the ebay thing I'm bothered about. It's the fact that they want to impliment it on more then just ebay. Think every safe haven auction site getting punched by this. That's what bothers me.[/QUOTE]

This is true, no matter what your feelings are about ebay if this isn't stopped now future auction sites will be hit with all of this. Oh and the stolen goods legislation gave me a chuckle, show a receipt for goods sold online........wow just wow.
 
Let's talk about the Remote Sales Taxes line.

If you are a business, selling on Ebay full time and declare it as income then yes, you should pay taxes.

For the majority of gamers, who sell here and there, this does not apply. I mean, they don't charge people who have a garage sale, selling used items, a tax. They don't charge the vendors at the swap meets, sales tax -- and they are out there daily in So Cal. This makes no sense. Ain't gonna happen.

The auction format is alive and well. Ebay is just so huge they are getting hammered. Or at least that's what they want you to think.
 
bread's done
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