Staying Out of Trouble with eBay’s Listing Policies

June 8th, 2008

Staying Out of Trouble with eBay’s Listing Policies.

While you can convince most things on eBay, quite a few things are banned. If you try to sell any of these things then eBay will remove your auction and all bids discretion be void.

Here is eBay’s full list of prohibited or questionable items:

Academic Software
Airline and Transit Related Items
Alcohol (also see Wine)
Animals and Wildlife Products
Anti-circumvention Policy
Artifacts
Authenticity Disclaimers
Autographed Items
Batteries
Beta Software
Bootleg Recordings
Brand Name Misuse
Catalog Sales
Catalytic Converters and Test Pipes
Celebrity Material
Charity or Fundraising Listings
Comparison Policy
Compilation and Informational Media
Contracts and Tickets
Counterfeit Currency and Stamps
Counterfeit Items
Credit Cards
Downloadable Media
Drugs & Drug Paraphernalia
Electronics Equipment
Embargoed Goods and Prohibited Countries
Encouraging Infringement Policy
Event Tickets
Faces, Names and Signatures
Firearms, Ammunition, Replicas, and Militaria
Fireworks
Food
Freon and Other Refrigerants
Gift Cards
Government IDs and Licenses
Hazardous, Restricted, and Perishable Items
Human Parts and Remains
Importation of Goods into the United States
International Trading - Buyers
International Trading - Sellers
Lockpicking Devices
Lottery Tickets
Mailing Lists and Personal Information
Manufacturers’ Coupons
Mature Audiences
Medical Devices
Misleading Titles
Mod Chips, Game Enhancers, and Boot Discs
Movie Prints
Multi-straighten Marketing, Pyramid and Matrix Programs
OEM Software
Offensive Material
Pesticides
Plants and Seeds
Police-Related Items
Political Memorabilia
Postage Meters
Pre-Sale Listings
Prescription Drugs and Devices
Promotional Items
Real Estate
Recalled Items
Recordable Media
Replica and Counterfeit Items
Satellite and Cable TV Descramblers
Slot Machines
Stocks and Other Securities
Stolen Property
Surveillance Equipment
Tobacco
Travel
Unauthorized Copies
Used Clothing
Warranties
Weapons & Knives
Wine (also see Alcohol)

Most of this is very obvious - of course you can’t bring around illegal things like drugs, pyramid schemes or stolen goods. Almost everything that is on the list is there because there is law against geting it. Some of the reasons, though, are a small-minded strange.

The ‘autographed items’ entry, for example, doesn’t mean that you can’t bring anything that’s been autographed - it just means that you can only sell it if it comes with a certificate of authenticity. The ‘artifacts’ entry prohibits you from selling Native American graves; ‘celebrity material’ means you can’t sell unauthorised pictures of celebrities; ‘embargoed goods’ means that you can’t induce anything that comes from Cuba… on and on it goes, and most of it you never need to know.

If your chosen kind of item seems to be on the list, though, and you’re concerned that you might not be able to prevail on it, then check the full list at http://pages.ebay.com/help/policies/items-ov.html to see whether the item is banned entirely or there are valid a few restrictions.

eBay says it will remove any items that it believes violate copyright law, but in reality they don’t have that many people to monitor the site. You will generally unequaled find that your auction gets removed if someone decides to report you - and even then, they might not get throughout to it.

Really, buying and inducing on eBay can sometimes feel more complicated than it really is, thanks to all the rules surrounding it - not to mention the jargon. Our ulteriorly email is a ‘jargon buster’, to help you learn the language of eBay..

Work At Home Scams - How Do You Recognize Work At Home Scams?

June 7th, 2008

Work At Home Scams - How Do You Recognize Work At Home Scams?

Work at home scams have been on the go for a long time. Ever since direct mail letters started pouring through the letter boxes of people everywhere, work at home scams have littered our waste paper bins nearly every day.

scamsThe only thing that has really changed now is that most of the people perpetuating the scams have turned to the Internet as it’s cheaper for them to carry on their nefarious activities there, and they can reach a lot more people a lot quicker too.

How do you recognize work at home scams? It can be very easy, and it can be very difficult, depending on how cunningly the scam has been set up. Some of the poorer quality work at home scams are easy to spot. They make outrageous claims that even an idiot wouldn’t believe. And yet people do fall for them, over and over again.

The perennial favorite seems to be stuffing envelopes. This one has been around since Noah’s Ark almost. The idea is that you are given envelopes and letters and you have to fold the paper and place it in the envelope thousands of times over to earn a return.

Of course, you have to pay a “registration fee” for the privilege of doing this, but you are told that the profits will soon cover that. They rarely if ever do. The work is tedious and soul destroying in the extreme, the pay promised never materializes, and you get depressed while the bills mount up higher and higher.

You could try working with home assembly kits. However, you will discover that you have to pay a fee to get the kit. That may seem reasonable, because the profits will cover it, but when you submit your assembled kit, you will discover that your work is not up to standard.

You may even accept this as you’re an amateur just starting out, but then you could be told that you have to sell the stupid assembled kit yourself. At this point you will probably give up, because you will soon learn that no one wants to buy it from you!

Before you ask, yes, this is just the tip of the iceberg. There are many, many more similar time-wasting work at home scams just waiting to grab your money. But you don’t have to let them. There are plenty of ways to help protect you from these parasites.

Check up on the company making the work at home offer. If you are unsure, then look for something else. Only check out the ones you personally come across, and not the ones that land in your email inbox unsolicited. If the offer looks good, which means reasonable - not $1,000 a minute - check even more. You can’t do too much checking up.

Always bear in mind though that there are plenty of genuine companies out there with genuine offers. Don’t get too suspicious or you’ll start to see every offer as work at home scams.

One review site offering an unbiased view on many of the best work at home opportunities is Best-HomeBiz.com.

Get Your F-R-E-E 21 Day Home Business eCourse at http://www.Best-Homebiz.com/blog

Will The Oil Price Stop Hiking Up?

June 5th, 2008

Will The Oil Price Stop Hiking Up?

Until last week, there have been two stories running in parallel. The first
story is of rampant inflation fueled by the price of oil making record new
highs every week. The subtext to this story is the dawn of a difficult
decade. The second story is of a stock market that believed inflation would
be contained and that the worst of the credit crunch is behind us. Last week
these two stories collided with the end result being a sudden realization
that we’re not quite out of the woods just yet.

According to Michael Cartine of Thomson/ Reuters “The danger from inflation
comes in from its inherent volatility; when prices rise 3% the first year, 5%
the next, 10% after that, but then stagnate or even drop for a year before
trending higher again. This type of environment becomes increasingly
difficult to make economic decisions in. Market participants around the world
will certainly attest that the last year or so has been a particularly
volatile time.”

The FTSE sold off hard, falling further than most other global stock indices
on the week. UK top tier stocks, led by banks and real estate shares, fell on
fears of negative equity in the UK housing market leading to trouble for
banks and consumers. Retailers including Marks and Spencer were being
punished as UK shoppers face the prospect of not being able to bank on
further house price rises to fuel further spending. The bricks and mortar ATM
is no longer paying out.

The plight of UK equities was not helped by that fact that even with oil
hitting $135; UK oil stocks were strangely subdued towards the end of the
week. Oil & gas stocks make up nearly 20% of the FTSE by market
capitalisation. The question remains whether this relative weakness is the
start of a rotation out of this sector, or whether it is just a couple of
days profit taking. Markets gave us a significant ‘tell’ on Thursday as
equities spiked following a natural gas inventory report which indicated
increased levels of storage. Oil fell back and stocks surged in the opposite
direction. Unfortunately, the rally didn’t last as crude reaches back to
previous highs. However, the way that markets reacted was certainly telling
and could be an indication of how things will play out when oil finally stops
going up.

Crude oil has now accelerated by 30% in under two months and 80% in a year.
It is little wonder that the MPC voted 8-1 to keep rates on hold with
inflation running so high. However, there are some potential weaknesses in
crude which are worth pointing out. According to Mike Rothman of ISI, global
demand growth for oil is now well below last year’s increase. In addition
there are reports of the Gulf being crammed with oil tankers chartered by
oil producing nations to hold oil they cannot sell. This suggests there are
no buyers at this price and when this happens, the laws of supply and demand
come into effect. Goldman’s Analyst Arjun N. Murti recently predicted that
oil could hit $150-$200 in the few years. While this prediction may still
come through, there are increasing signs of this oil bubble over stretching.

With bank holidays in both the UK and US, it is a quiet start to next week on
Monday. The most notable release on Tuesday is the US new home sales data
which is expected to show indicated further pain for US home builders. The
only question is the degree of acceleration in this decline, as is expected
to be the case with the UK’s Nationwide House Price index released some time
on Wednesday morning. The week’s top announcement though is likely to be the
US GDP figures on Thursday as the US economy weighs up the benefits of the
Bush tax rebate against the rising cost of oil.

After experiencing a much needed sell off, there is the potential for the
FTSE to stabilize over the next week said BetOnMarkets.com traders,
especially if (big if) oil manages to go a week without making a new record
high. With that in mind a bull bet on the FTSE to be higher than 5900 on the
9th of June could yield around 19%.

About BetOnMarkets.com:

http://www.BetOnMarkets.com is the world’s leading Fixed Odds Financial Trading website. Fully licensed and regulated globally, BetOnMarkets.com handles around 18,000 trades a day, from over 130,000 registered clients. Over 15 million trades have been processed since inception in 2000. The multi-award winning BetOnMarkets.com allows traders to speculate on the movement of the worlds’ major financial markets, up down or sideways without actually owning the market, stock or currency you are buying.

editor@my.regentmarkets.com
Tel: 448003762737