Similar thing
Has just happened to private VPN providers.
Visa & Mastercard decided they were all criminals and stopped processing payments to them.
Judge, Jury..................
Mastercard has broken ranks with other payment providers such as PayPal and Visa and begun allowing payments to WikiLeaks. Visa, MasterCard, PayPal, the Bank of America and Western Union all suspended payment processing for WikiLeaks days after the site began publishing leaked US diplomatic cables in November 2010. The …
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Ebay is full of counterfeit stuff.
They let stuff like 150 in one Neo Geo bootlegs on it and fake DS carts. (All those ones in the little plastic boxes are blatantly fake.)
They try and act like they have a moral viewpoint but they don't give a damn about it. (Same as Google with those fake online pharmacies.)
It's worse than Google, eBay are actively making money from each auction, both in listing and final price fee's as well as Paypal fee's.
It's not just tech stuff thats fake, a surprising amount of stuff on there is fake.
clothes, shoes, handbags, watches, Jewellery, even car parts.
If there's a successful brand out there, you can bet it's been ripped off and sold on eBay (and sells well) all the time eBay taking their cut of the blackmarket.
You try and report an auction to eBay because it's fake goods??
They just ignore it and hope you don't notice!!
It's off-topic, but you're only telling part of the story WRT eBay's attitude to counterfeits.
If you try to sell genuine, big brand goods, e.g. used Burberry, you'll be slapped down in minutes as soon as you use the brand name. Penalised if you dare to describe them as genuine goods, because the manufacturers don't want their brand diluted by a secondhand market. Effectively, you're forced to prove your innocence rather than your accuser being forced to prove your guilt.
Of course, if you're not a big brand with expensive lawyers, you have no chance trying to block copyright-breaching items from sale just by telling eBay about the offending items.
As usual, it's not about honesty or justice. It's about how big you are.
I'm quite glad Visa and Mastercard are playing their hand in this bullying fashion - first with Wikileaks, now with VPN providers.
The more they do this shit, the more they drive the uptake of Bitcoin. And that can only be a good thing. For example, I'd never bothered with Bitcoin myself until my VPN provider advised me they could no longer accept payment from my Mastercard. Result: I installed a Bitcoin client, bought myself some Bitcoins, and renewed my VPN subscription that way. So that's one more person they've pushed onto Bitcoin, and now that I've finally gone to the trouble of installing and adopting it, I'll be using it wherever it's accepted, instead of relying on my Mastercard. And I won't be the only one.
So keep on kicking those own goals, Visa and Mastercard, and help drive Bitcoin into the mainstream.