Quizzes & Puzzles9 mins ago
Ebay Re Watch List
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Does the person that is advertising the goods for sale on e bay know how many people are watching in there list?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No wendilla, it doesn't work like that. I've got 5 people watching something that finishes this morning - doesn't mean any of them are going to bid.
If you have bid for the item it will show in your eBay bidding list anyway, there is no need to watch it as well. The seller will be able to see who's bid, but not the total amount of their highest bid (all they can see is the current bid price) - and once an auction has started, the first bid is made, they can't change the selling price after that, it's all then dependent on the highest bidder.
If you have bid for the item it will show in your eBay bidding list anyway, there is no need to watch it as well. The seller will be able to see who's bid, but not the total amount of their highest bid (all they can see is the current bid price) - and once an auction has started, the first bid is made, they can't change the selling price after that, it's all then dependent on the highest bidder.
Strangely I was about to submit a similar question. Yesterday I looked at an item that started at £3-50 with no bids.I decided to make a bid and put £5-00 and then changed my mind and decided to watch it for a few days. Without pressing the Make your bid box I then added it to my watch list. Later I went back to it and although there had still been no bids the starting price was now £4-95. So the question is could the seller see my figure of £5-00 without me submitting it?
No... if you fill in the bid amount box, but don't submit it (it actually takes two actions to complete the submission, there's a following box that asks you to confirm your bid) no one, especailly the seller will be able to see that you've terminated you inclination to bid but didn't follow through.
By the way, this applies to the E-bay system as displayed here in the U.S., but I suspect it's the same, pretty much, worldwide...
As someone has already alluded... once a bid has been made on any item, the price posted by the seller cannot be changed. However, even after a posted bid, you can "early terminate" the sale and then complete the entire process to re-list the item. I don't think E-bay appreciates this kind of manipulation, but then I've never used that function...
By the way, this applies to the E-bay system as displayed here in the U.S., but I suspect it's the same, pretty much, worldwide...
As someone has already alluded... once a bid has been made on any item, the price posted by the seller cannot be changed. However, even after a posted bid, you can "early terminate" the sale and then complete the entire process to re-list the item. I don't think E-bay appreciates this kind of manipulation, but then I've never used that function...
Vulcan in your case the seller simply decided to change the price. You can not alter a price once a bid is in but you can before there is a bid.
If you had put your bid in it would say £3.50 and 1 bid. Only you could see that your max bid ( as that is what it would have been) was £5. If you had bid on it the seller could not have changed the price.
If you had put your bid in it would say £3.50 and 1 bid. Only you could see that your max bid ( as that is what it would have been) was £5. If you had bid on it the seller could not have changed the price.