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Elusive iPhone is sold on eBay

By Linda Rosencrance , Computerworld , 03/22/2007
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Maybe that old saw was right; there really is an easy mark born every minute. And in this case 23 of them.

Those 23 people bid on the much-ballyhooed Apple iPhone on eBay this week, and the high bidder paid $1,125 for one of the six phones the seller, rgonzales23455, had on auction. The problem is that the iPhone isn't scheduled to ship until June. And when it does, it will have a retail price of $499 for a 4GB model and $599 for an 8GB model.

"Please note: I have 6 of these phones available for immediate shipping. I accept Paypal only for this auction. Free shipping via USPS Priority Mail with Delivery Confirmation. Will ship immediately after payment clears Monday -- Friday," rgonzales23455 said in his auction listing.

Rgonzales23455 didn't respond to a question e-mailed to him asking how he came into possession of the as-yet-released iPhone. Apple Inc. also didn't respond to a request for comment. However, an eBay spokeswoman said that after eBay was alerted to the iPhones auctions, it pulled the listings.

"Thanks ... for informing us of the Apple iPhone listings," the eBay spokeswoman said in an e-mail to Computerworld. "As we understand, the Apple iPhone will not be commercially available until June. Any such listings claiming to be selling the Apple iPhone are in violation of eBay's pre-sale policy which require sellers to guarantee shipment of the item listed within 30 days from the date of purchase. As such, all postings violating eBay's pre-sale policy will be removed."

If a buyer actually paid for an iPhone and the item was not delivered, the buyer could file a claim with eBay.

In an e-mail to Computerworld, whpub, the high bidder of the iPhone auction, wrote that the reason behind the bid was, "Very simply: low risk, high reward." The buyer said if the item is not delivered, eBay and PayPal will back him up.

The buyer wrote of receiving many e-mails berating the buyer for "being taken" by a scammer. But whpub was willing to take the gamble.

"EBay insures up to $200 and PayPal up to $2,000 if the seller does not deliver," whpub said. "Besides, there are rumors of iPhones being shipped as early as early April, and there's always a chance this seller managed to get one somehow. Further, it's not unheard of for a company to pre-release high end items early and unannounced to measure market acceptance. eBay provides a perfect venue for such market testing. Consider this a form of legalized gambling. It's like buying a lottery ticket. Very little cost, and potential for very high reward."

An EBay spokeswoman said the buyer should file a claim with PayPal because it has a buyer protection plan. The buyer also plans to follow up with authorities if a real iPhone arrives.

"I have no doubt Apple would be interested if their supply lines were being intercepted," the buyer wrote. "Other listings on eBay offered iPhones, but follow up e-mails were off eBay and said 'My PayPal account is down so I'll need payment via Western Union' -- the very thing E-bay warns about. So I avoided obvious scammers where no buyer protection was available. But not so with this seller,' whpub said.

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The doofus and the phony iPhone on eBayBy Anonymous on March 23, 2007, 10:26 amOh, please - maybe this doofus isn't being taken because PayPal will cover his loss - but there ain't no such thing as a free lunch - somebody (PayPal in this case)...

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PayPal would not necessarily protect himBy Anonymous on March 23, 2007, 12:27 pmMy understanding is that PayPal will try to retrieve the funds, but if the seller drains his PayPal account soon after the auction, PayPal will come back with "sorry,...

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What an idiotBy drdoug99 on March 30, 2007, 5:00 amHow the hell does he end up saving $375 like he said? Okay, blowing 1500 bucks on nothing, which is more then double the actual price of the phone when it eventually...

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whpub was taken...By Anonymous on March 30, 2007, 11:41 amThe bidders can justify all they want... they are gullible and were taken. What logical reason would any individual or company have to pay triple the retail value...

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