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soundbuffer

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  1. Thats exactly right, he has preyed on the general public not having the computer knowledge about ram latency and timings. I have made the paypal dispute and escalated it to a claim. It now says that the guy has till 10th Jan to respond. Unfortunately I don't know if I will be able to claim my postage costs back, because paypal only allowed me to ask for a full refund of the product and no more. I have already taken photos. I even sent them to the seller to prove what I had been sent, but he already knew and still chose to send the wrong ram (still chose to try and [problem] me). I will also send recorded delivery. The thing which saddens me in this, is that the seller is [causing problems] people and getting away with it because of peoples lack of knowledge, plus I bet even if some people knew they would just think sod it, too much hassle trying to claim money back.
  2. thanks for the good wishes and advice MODERATORS NOTE: PLEASE KEEP IT CIVIL OR POSTS WILL BE REMOVED.
  3. You didn't post with another point of view, you set about arguing against me! e.g. "The negative feedback was there before you bought, I've just looked at it and it would certainly put me off trading with the seller" Why was that relevant to me? Does that mean just because he had a few negatives out of thousands of positives and you wouldn't have bought from him, that he had the right to swindle me??? Then when you appologise you have to chip in a last sarcastic comment: "I can't be responsible for your feelings if you disagree with my point of view", "I'm sorry if that description was a little too subtle" I posted asking for advice, not for someone to shoot me down and defend a con artist :-|
  4. I have answered your assumptions in my post, read it. e.g: You said: "Messing you about and lack of customer service skills do not make the seller a conman or fraudster, a chump maybe, but not a conman or fraudster" The truth is that he is a conman as he has told me via email that there was a mistake on the listing and what was sent out was lower spec (and therefore much cheaper product) than advertised. Most people just buy the product and take no notice of the deeper specifications, so quite a few people were just happy that they got the product, the didn't realise that they have paid for a premium (so to speak) product, and have recieved a much cheaper version. No one would have paid £57 for if they knew it was worth only £40 at a push. The seller only admitted it to me after sending him many emails, so yes he is a fraudster. Plus he hasn't contacted the rest of the customers to offer them a refund for the much cheaper product sent out, he has just happily profited from their lack of knowledge. Bad customer service my eye. Anyway I must say that there really is no need for you to be deliberately arguementative here, I only posted because of my concerns with this fraudster! How can you question if I paid the seller first? That is just ridiculous. I did pay him first, no doubt about it! I paid him via paypal and he sent it! How on earth can you say its not relevant? You are the one that brought it up here: "If you really do not want to send the memory back to him why should he give you a refund. Maybe he has experienced people saying they have returned an item and he gave a refund, but they kept the item. Aka free memory" What the issue I was asking about was TRUST. I trusted him to send it out after I had paid, why should I be the one with all the risk? Hence it is reasonable for me to ask for my money back before I post it back. Plus I don't trust that he will send my postage costs back, another reason why I wanted the money first so I could refuse to sent the product back until I recieved all costs. Before you start arguing that I shouldn't get postage costs back, I would like to point out that how just would that be for me to pay for someone wasting my time, and attempting to [problem] me? You say you have just been trying to give another point of view here, but you appear to just want to argue with me for no apparent reason. Think I will go the paypal dispute route as advised by other members
  5. Your post is quite irritating in that you make assumptions here. The proportion of negative feedback was low, so I went for it. I thought that as he is obviously a business seller I would be ok. Yes my money would be tied up in it if it was as described, but that would have been fine as I could then use it and not have to buy some different ram!!! He is a fraud as he sent me an email saying there was a mistake on the listing, this cl7 ram that was sent to me is much cheaper (about £40), yet the other people who bought it and left postive feedback have not been informed (those people obviously don't know much about the proper specifications of ram). He has been happy to [problem] them though. I put trust in him and sent my money first, why shouldnt I ask him to send my money back first then send his ram back? He is the one with dodgy feedback and previous track record that indicates he lies.
  6. Thanks for the info, i'm confused about the returns policy bit. The page I bought from was here: KINGSTON HYPERX PC8500 DDR2 1066 4GB 2 x 2GB RAM MEMORY on eBay, also, Memory, Desktop PC Components, Computing (end time 16-Dec-08 23:13:58 GMT) Regarding paypal, what happens if the guy claims I send him a paperweight back, even though I send the original product back? That is what i'm worried about because his feedback indicates he has done this before... Thanks again for the input guys, much appreciated
  7. Thank you for the response noomill060 I paid via paypal, but the normal way where paypal takes the money from your bank account. My friend signed for it (was sent recorded) as I was out at the time. I bought the product on the 5th December 2008, I recieved it on the 22nd December. The day which I recieved it, I sent him the first email complaining that it was a different lower spec product. He didn't respond, so I sent another email on the 27th December. Still no response, so sent him a message stating I will take any step to get my money back on 2nd January 2009 (to which he responded the very next day). DSR is on my side in what way? Does he have to send the refund before I send it back? If this is the case, what happens if he just refuses to refund? These con artists can make life so frustrating!
  8. First post here, so hello everyone! I have scoured the internet for information on the problem I have and seem to be getting conflicting information, so I thought I has best pick some knowledgable brains! I bought a computer product from an ebay trader though a "buy it now", and paid by paypal. Now when I recieved the product (which incidently took ages, seller lied about dispatch etc), it was a different (inferior) specification to what was advertised on the auction page. I sent an email outlining the problem to the seller, which was ignored, then another email with the same content in. This was ignored again, and I sent another email telling the seller that I believed I had been defrauded and that I would take any steps necessary to get my money back. The seller finally responded with no appology etc, but a mere "You can return the item for a refund" and "it was a listing error". I sent an email back saying that I was within my rights to ask for a refund before sending out to him, and the seller responded that I am not within my rights to ask for refund before sending, and that I should read the Distance Selling Act (2000). This is very frustrating as I cannot afford to have this money tied up in product, but I do not want to take the risk of returning it in case he claims he hasn't recieved it. He has quite a few negative feedbacks for slow delivery, wrong product etc, and one buyer also stated that the seller had claimed they hadn't recieved the product back when it had been sent to them. As the seller has messed me about so much and is clearly a fraudster who doesn't care about customer service, I really do not want to send the product back to him. I wouldn't mind putting a small claims claim against him, however I am not sure of a proper address for him (he has an address for writing letters to on his ebay page, but the product came from a totally different area of the country!), plus I don't know whether I can get the inital cost of the claim back from him either (conflicting information everywhere I read). If anyone has any suggestions or information, it would be most gratefully recieved as i'm getting quite stressed by the whole issue! Thank you for your time, SB
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