Trade Auction Rules Posted
Psycho Pixie
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I don't mean to be rude but I assure you that you can. I have a listing up right now and it has bids and I went in to end it just to be 100% sure and it does let me... it says you can cancel all bids and end the listing. I am sorry you were misinformed.
Bidding on Auctions. After thinking about it more I really don't think any bid should be allowed to change. However, I do think people should be able to submit multiple bids. For example, I may offer an LE 300. Then I may feel like I'm loosing so I'll post a new offer of an LE 300 plus and LE 1000. If that still doesn't get the auctioneer's interest I may post an offer of the same LE 300 plus an LE 500. Now, in the end I think the auctioneer should have the right to choose from any of those offers. Maybe they gave it more thought and actually like that second offer better than the last.
Can we please add a rule requiring the OP to close/lock the thread once winner is announced?
thanx!
Another thought on the subject. I strongly disagree with the "no reserve" rule. Here's why. Who is a reserve hurting? Not the the bidder. They wouldn't have been chosen either way. The reserve only really affects the person putting the pin up for bid. They are taking a risk now. I agree with what Bellcat22 wrote as well. Why are the mods making rules? Was there an issue before? If it ain't broke don't try fix'n it.
But be aware, if they did find a way to allow reserves, chances are their would be other "checks and balances" to make sure the bidders are not being taken advantage of either. T
Another thought on the subject. I strongly disagree with the "no reserve" rule. Here's why. Who is a reserve hurting? Not the the bidder. They wouldn't have been chosen either way. The reserve only really affects the person putting the pin up for bid. They are taking a risk now. I agree with what Bellcat22 wrote as well. Why are the mods making rules? Was there an issue before? If it ain't broke don't try fix'n it.
I can see both sides of this reserves issue. Nobody wants to put a decent pin up for auction and end up with a hidden mickey because that was all that was offered but if reserves are allowed only the person putting the pin up for auction knows what that is.
In a traditional auction or on ebay reserves are allowed but the admin running those auctions are aware of the reserve, on a forum there is no way to control that.
I think something of a halfway house might be to allow minimum bids to be specified such as LE1000 or trade to want ratio. I also think the rules could do with tightening on bid changes/retractions.
The popularity of auctions appeared very quickly and I'm sure the admins are trying to make this fair for everyone while protecting the site from any unforeseen problems.
Can someone please explain the difference between these two for me???
1) Posting an auction thread with a reserve
2) Posting a trade thread asking people to post their offer and the best acceptable offer(if there is one) gets the trade
Other than giving it the name "auction".....seriously, what's the difference?!?! I just don't understand this grumbling about no reserve. From what I can see the ONLY thing the reserve rule restricts is which section you can post your thread and what you can call it. Is calling it an "auction" really that important to people?
Can someone please explain the difference between these two for me???
1) Posting an auction thread with a reserve
2) Posting a trade thread asking people to post their offer and the best acceptable offer(if there is one) gets the trade
Other than giving it the name "auction".....seriously, what's the difference?!?! I just don't understand this grumbling about no reserve. From what I can see the ONLY thing the reserve rule restricts is which section you can post your thread and what you can call it. Is calling it an "auction" really that important to people?
Because with just a trading thread you can't put people against each other and push them to give you more more more:wavey:
There is a significant difference between and "auction" with "reserve" and a trading thread.
Simply put, until addresses are exchanged, there is nothing binding on either party to a trade. I can make a post saying I am looking for a pin I don't have for a my [Pinpics]1799[/Pinpics]. You see that I don't have [Pinpics]1[/Pinpics] in my collection. You instantly write to me saying "I want to trade Pin 1 for your Pin 1799. Here is my address." However, until I confirm the trade also, it is simply not a go. You cannot compel me to trade PP 1799 for PP1.
Now, if I put up PP 1799 as an auction, with no reserve, and you are the only bidder with PP 1; you can compel the trade to take place. It becomes a contract. However, with a reserve you could not, since the bidder has not fulfilled the contract.
The biggest issue with a "reserve" in the context of these auctions is the fears that they are amorphous. Say I want a "good" pin for 1799. I do not believe this a proper reserve. What does that mean? My idea of "good" might differ from yours. As such, no contract can be formed as their is no meeting of minds.This leads to concern that the auctions are simply fishing expeditions.
There is a simple way to allow reserves to exist: the reserves must be quantifiable. Someone who knows nothing about pin trading should be able to given the facts and be able to say "yes, that reserve can be met." Examples of quantifiable reserves include (but would not be limited to):
*No Hidden Mickeys
*No Pins with More People Trading Than Wanting
*No Pirate pins
*At least [X Number] of pins of my wants list
*Any bid must include Stitch Pin
etc.
Any of these are quantifiable because anyone can look at the various factors and determine that a reserve has been meet. (I note that the someone might need to be taught what a "Hidden Mickey" or "Stitch" pin is).
Now, lets re-run my 1799 auction. I have placed the following reserve: "Any bid must have at least 2 pins off my wants list". Well, you look at my current wants list with 62 pins on it. That is a pretty tight reserve. It may discourage some or even many people from bidding. But you see that I have the Future World Icon WDI set on my list. So you bid:
Pin 1
[Pinpics]90261[/Pinpics]: WDI Epcot Center: World of Motion Logo
[Pinpics]90263[/Pinpics]: WDI Epcot Center: Communicore Logo
Now at the end of the time period for the auction comes and goes and you are the only bidder. Is this a fair trade? I would say no. Pin 1799 regularly sells for over a $500; the two WDI pins are currently being clearance for $5.00 each.
But can you compel the trade? The answer is probably yes. You have meet the reserve. Anyone can see that my reserve was "Two pins off my wants list" and both pins appeared on my wants list. So if I tried to back out, you could force me through various methods to make the trade.
Hence the difference between a trade posting and a quantifiable reserve auction.
kajtdd
Ok.....in a theoretical sense I guess I can see what you are saying, but in reality, I just don't think it holds any water.
You can say an auction is a "contract", but come on....trades fall through every day. Pre-sales, pre-trades, people just backing out, people realizing that they don't have a pin anymore, all sorts of reasons why trades that were already agreed upon fall through. And what happens then? Nothing. The trade doesn't happen and one or both parties may or may not be upset. We're still talking about pins here, not multimillion dollar companies. In the end, if someone doesn't honor an agreement the worst that typically happens to them is bad feedback or a tarnished rep (or a thread bashing them, but that's a whole other topic altogether). The same will go for auctions. If someone doesn't follow through, what are you going to do? What is anyone going to do?
And a quantifiable reserve.....sounds like waaaaaaayyyyyy more trouble than it is worth. Not to mention there are about a hundred loopholes. If you are auctioning off a high end pin you would have to be EXTREMELY thorough in setting your reserving rules and chances are, you will miss something. You might say, "Offer must include a DA LE 100 Stitch pin" and then someone offers you this ugly thing [Pinpics]43052[/Pinpics]. Oh....sorry....what I meant to say is "Offer must include a DA LE 100 Stitch pin except: 43052,45256, 45648,85694,23215,.......". The list of caveats could go on forever. Not all pins are created equal!!! Just because a pin is an LE 100 Stitch doesn't mean that it is really valuable, and just because a pin is an LE 1000, 2000, or OE doesn't mean it isn't. So, right off the bat, in order to have a quantifiable reserve you have to be very specific.
So ok....let's say you are very specific now and say only pins on your wants list and you think you are covered. Then someone comes in and actually offers you a pin from your wants list and your gut just doesn't like it, what can you do? I'll tell you what you can do....you can take it off your wants list! That is a disaster just waiting to happen because it allows the person auctioning the pin to change the rules as they go.
At the end of the day, in order to have a quantifiable reserve you basically need to list the exact pins you would be willing to accept, and at that point, it isn't an auction, it is a trade thread. There is no point whatsoever of conducting an auction that only two people could potentially qualify for. It is just taking up space and mucking up the boards.
Um... Auctions simply are not trades threads. Unlike a trade thread, neither party cannot simply back out; there is no option for it to "fall through". The parties have already pre-agreed to trade based on a winning bid. Hence, they are contracts. Niether party cannot simply go back on them. If I offer my Pin 1799 for auction, and the only bid is Pin 1, then both parties have to go through. If I offer my Pin 1 for auction, and someone decides to offer Pin 1799, and that is the winning bid, then both parties still have to trade. My example is extreme, but if you seriously believe someone would not sue over a $100 dollars, then I might recommend watching People's Court, Judge Judy, etc.
Can you make a very restrictive reserve? Of course you can! As long people know what it is before hand. The danger is you won't successfully auction off your pin. On eBay, I can place a $1,000 reserve on my Pin 1; I doubt it will ever hit it.
However, you examples changes the rules in the middle of the action. That has already been prohibited by DPF.
AgThat of course is a problem - and violates DPF's rules. You can't change the rules during the middle of the auction. It also probably constitutes fraud. However, it also easy to prove - the bidder simply PDFs the persons wants list (if the reserve was simply "a pin on my wants list").
Again, you dont need an "exact" pin you are looking for. Your reserve can be anything quantifiable - from no hidden mickeys to no pirate pins to at least one stitch (or some type of combinations). The fact that some people are exclude from bidding, IMO, is irrelevent to the question if reserves are allowed.
kajtdd
If auctions are not your thing, then simply ignore them. They are no longer mucking up the trade boards, but their own forum.
kajtdd
An auction is a contract, a trade agreement is not. If an auction was to fall through, and someone really wanted to, they could print the forum rules, print you auction thread, take you to court, and likely win. A trade agreement, until addresses are exchanged, nothing could be done legally. I am not a lawyer, but I believe this is the case.
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