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I received  an email response from someone purporting to have an item I was seeking on the Want To Buy Forum. His price was approximately correct but asked me to pay by going to a BitCoin ATM. Growing suspicious I asked for a picture of the item.. He said his phone could not take picture of item but he did send a photo of a military ID matching the name on the email. 

 

My bet is this is fraudulent. I 'd be interested to know if any of you have experienced a similar situation.

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A few points to consider:

1) Since you did NOT put you personal eMail address in your "Wanted to Buy" posting, the person MUST be a registered "member" here on OGR. Otherwise he/she could not have opened your profile and found your eMail address.

2) Since the person must be a registered "member", maybe ask the moderators to check the person out.

3) The requirements for payment certainly sound fishy.

RSJB18 posted:

Another reason why you never post your email address on the forum. Only members can access it through your profile. Doesn't stop everything but the scammers looking for addressed on web sites will be stopped.

One such Bitcoin culprit is a forum member using the name, Stephen E. Thomas on his gmail account.  Replied to a WTB I posted that referred respondents to my profile for contact information.  Ceased contact when asked for his forum display name.

Hot Water posted:

A few points to consider:

2) Since the person must be a registered "member", maybe ask the moderators to check the person out.

Suggested identifying IP addresses of the relatively small number of views of my WTB post and matching with member logins, but that apparently is outside the scope of the moderator role.

Last edited by hobby-go-lucky
gunrunnerjohn posted:

I have to question why this kind of post keeps showing up?  Yes, it's a SCAM!

Why would anyone even consider a deal like this?

For the record, I'm glad that people will post threads like this.  Gives other members like me who haven't been at this site very long knowledge and warnings of what to look for. 

Agreed though, sounds like a scam.

I was also approached by someone wanting to be paid by Bitcoin via an WTB ad I posted on the forum. I managed to get the guy on the phone - he had a foreign accent and swore he was not a scammer. I asked him to send me pictures of the item he alleged to have for sale, and he sent pictures of the box, but they were of an older product with Odyssey that didn't match what I was looking for. I walked away from the deal.

Bottom line for me: If someone doesn't accept Paypal, there's something wrong. Its the universal payment system nowadays.

 

Last edited by Paul Kallus
Paul Kallus posted:

...Bottom line for me: If someone doesn't accept Paypal, there's something wrong. Its the universal payment system nowadays.

aussteve posted:

Not sure about the need for PayPal for someone to be legitimate....

For many it is not a matter of legitimacy as much as it is convenience. As an example, I have a few web clients that I bill for services on a regular basis for both hosting and site design work. It is much more convenient for them to just be able to click a link in their emailed invoice and pay via PayPal as opposed to writing and sending a check.

Same here. It's a lot easier for someone to pay via PayPal than it is to pay by check or money order.

aussteve posted:

Not sure about the need for PayPal for someone to be legitimate. 

I've never had it or needed it.  I just shipped several items to forumites last week as i have in the past.  

And no rich I don't run a hobby store. 

I said "bottom line for me" that something could be wrong. Never said anything about legitimate or not.

Its a free-country and people can use whatever payment system they're comfortable with.

 

 

Last edited by Paul Kallus
Rich Melvin posted:
Paul Kallus posted:

...Bottom line for me: If someone doesn't accept Paypal, there's something wrong. Its the universal payment system nowadays.

aussteve posted:

Not sure about the need for PayPal for someone to be legitimate....

For many it is not a matter of legitimacy as much as it is convenience. As an example, I have a few web clients that I bill for services on a regular basis for both hosting and site design work. It is much more convenient for them to just be able to click a link in their emailed invoice and pay via PayPal as opposed to writing and sending a check.

Same here. It's a lot easier for someone to pay via PayPal than it is to pay by check or money order.

PayPal has been in business since 1998. In 2002 Ebay bought it then in 2015 divested it. It has been a publicly traded company since 2002. The basic issue for people that sell with PayPal is like credit card companies it charges a fee for sellers whether they run a business or not. I believe it operates under the principle that all money sent to anyone is a business transaction. This is the reason for its Friends and Family option where it does not charge fees.

I have been using PayPal for my business since 2008 and also paying for product from other sellers. I find it convenient but most importantly I'm not sending my credit card number to everyone on the internet. 

With that said if anyone I would buy from ever said BitCoin or Western Union I would run. In my business I will accept US Post Office checks but won't accept bank checks (especially ones with weird names). I had one hanging on my shop wall for a number of years as a reminder (a guy overpaid big, said keep a $100 for my trouble and send him the balance by wire - yea ok will get right on it.....). I'm also not much enthused with and discourage personal checks (another learning experience early in my business career) unless a customer is known or is willing to wait for 3+ weeks after depositing the check before I ship product. 

 I found out there is no time limit for a bank to refuse payment.  They can come along six months later and demand reimbursement.  And get it!

I had always thought when a check "cleared" you were home free.  Not true, according to a WaMu VP I contacted.

I was just curious - I knew the check would bounce when I took it - the guy was broke.  I went to the bank and asked how long before it "cleared".  They laughed.

I think the only way to make sure a check will clear, is to take the check to the bank it was written from and cash it. When I had my business, I got a check for parts from a local bank. I just happened to have an account there too. There was insufficient funds in the guys acct. well, about once a month I would try to cash that check and it would not go. One day, about 8 or 9 months later, I took it to the bank and it cashed. Now I had my money. The guy who originally wrote the checkcalled and griped me out as it made 3 or 4 of his other recent checks bounce. Ha, ha. He thought I had forgotten about it and thrown the check away. Served him right.

mowingman posted:

... Ha, ha. He thought I had forgotten about it and thrown the check away. Served him right.

Mowingman, that is actually quite the most awesome story I've heard today.   Love that he griped about it afterwards.  What could he have said?  "Ohhh, but you were supposed to just forget about it!" 

No way, Jose!  You got your money and comeuppance!  

Paul Kallus posted:

 

I said "bottom line for me" that something could be wrong. Never said anything about legitimate or not.

Its a free-country and people can use whatever payment system they're comfortable with.

 

 

Paul, not intending to start an argument, but what you posted;

"Bottom line for me: If someone doesn't accept Paypal, there's something wrong."

does not say something COULD be wrong.

I have my reasons that I will not voluntarily use PayPal and there are others that have theirs.  

As for this statement;

"Its the universal payment system nowadays."  

I believe that will remain "cash" until done away with.

GregM posted:

As for this statement;

"Its the universal payment system nowadays."  

I believe that will remain "cash" until done away with.

The obvious response is that it's dumb to send cash through the mail, so some other payment method is called for.  So the question is which one is best.

But beyond that, have you read about and seen pictures of some of the counterfeit cash that is being produced these days?  It's really "good".  I rarely sell items to people I don't know, but if I did, I would use my "test marker" on all of the bills.  And even that isn't 100% reliable.  

Much as I hate to see our lives being taken over by impersonal electronic magic, I will stick with PayPal as the most reliable method.  

GregM posted:

...As for this statement;
"Its the universal payment system nowadays."
I believe that will remain "cash" until done away with...

Really? I have not paid for anything with CASH for years, other than the occasional lunch at a fast food place.

It is much more convenient to put our purchases on a credit card, then get on line at the end of the month and pay the bill with a few mouse clicks. No interest, no fees, just convenience. All our utility bills, plus cable, phone and internet for the house and the satellite service in the motor home are paid automatically with a direct draw from the checking account...no checks to write and mail. My Railroad Retirement (equivalent to Social Security) monthly payment is a direct deposit to my checking account...no check.

Out of about a dozen web clients, only one still pays me with a monthly check. All the others use PayPal.

As an aside to this subject...20 years ago there were aviation companies all over the country that flew cancelled checks back to their respective banks everyday. That was their only business...flying cancelled checks at night. In my area in northeast Ohio, there was an outfit at Lorain County Airport that had a fleet of 24 Aerostars that they used every night to fly cancelled checks. In that era, during the wee hours of every morning, there were thousands of small aircraft in the air carrying cancelled checks. Today, there are none. That business is completely gone now, mainly for two reasons. The internet, and the drastic drop in the number of checks written these days.

Like it or not, cash (and checks) are on their way out.

Last edited by Rich Melvin
Mallard4468 posted:
GregM posted:

As for this statement;

"Its the universal payment system nowadays."  

I believe that will remain "cash" until done away with.

The obvious response is that it's dumb to send cash through the mail, so some other payment method is called for.  So the question is which one is best.

But beyond that, have you read about and seen pictures of some of the counterfeit cash that is being produced these days?  It's really "good".  I rarely sell items to people I don't know, but if I did, I would use my "test marker" on all of the bills.  And even that isn't 100% reliable.  

Much as I hate to see our lives being taken over by impersonal electronic magic, I will stick with PayPal as the most reliable method.  

There is a difference between what payment method may be BEST in a given situation and a UNIVERSAL payment system.

And for what it is worth, I once received cash in the mail in payment for a car I sold here on the forum.  It was surprising and quite unexpected, but the buyer got his car shipped out asap.

 

Rich Melvin posted:
GregM posted:

...As for this statement;
"Its the universal payment system nowadays."
I believe that will remain "cash" until done away with...

Really? I have not paid for anything with CASH for years, other than the occasional lunch at a fast food place.

It is much more convenient to put our purchases on a credit card, then get on line at the end of the month and pay the bill with a few mouse clicks. No interest, no fees, just convenience. All our utility bills, plus cable, phone and internet for the house and the satellite service in the motor home are paid automatically with a direct draw from the checking account...no checks to write and mail.

Out of about a dozen web clients, only one still pays me with a monthly check. All the others use PayPal.

As an aside to this subject...20 years ago there were aviation companies all over the country that flew cancelled checks back to their respective banks everyday. That was their only business...flying cancelled checks at night. In my area in northeast Ohio, there was an outfit at Lorain County Airport that had a fleet of 24 Aerostars that they used every night to fly cancelled checks. In that era, during the wee hours of every morning, there were thousands of small aircraft in the air carrying cancelled checks. Today, there are none. That business is completely gone now, mainly for two reasons. The internet, and the drastic drop in the number of checks written these days.

Like it or not, cash (and checks) are on their way out.

I don't pay for much with cash either these days.  I haven't written a check in years although in certain circumstances my bank has sent a paper check even though I used the banks online bill pay facility to make the payment.  I use a CC that accumulates points as much as possible too.  I will stand by my statement that "I believe that will remain "cash" until done away with..."  It is a matter of definition, not preferences to me.

In short!  DON'T DO IT! Back in 2018 I had the same thing, only this guy wanted money sent via Western Union!  I asked for pictures and he said his phone couldn't do it correctly. Etc, etc, etc,   I found out my local Walgreens handles Western Union. The employee talked me out of it, saying it is probably a scam. I took her advise, and I am glad I did. And the people on the Forum said  to stay away. Hope you do too!!

Regarding paper checks, I will be SOOO HAPPY once hand written paper checks have been eliminated!!!  Nothing more fustrating than waiting for some old lady in line at the check out counter at the local A&P or Stop and Shop and watch the cashier total everything up and then the old lady slowly pulls out a checkbook after the total has been calculated and methodically writes out the check and then writes down the check info in the register before tearing it off and handing to the cashier.

It just makes you want to scream!  Just use a debit card like everyone else these days!  LOL 

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