LiveAuctioneers reported a glitch on the eBay Live Auctions platform over the weekend, just weeks before the platform is set to permanently close on December 31, 2008. An auctioneer who wrote to AuctionBytes this morning said his Sunday auction was affected by what he called the eBay "meltdown" and reported losses reaching several thousand dollars, plus the loss of capital from the expected proceeds from his $100k event.
LiveAuctioneers wrote on its website that the problem was caused by eBay's applet - the onscreen window through which bids are transmitted to auction houses in real time. According to the company, which helps auction houses add an Internet-bidding component to their real-life auctions, the applet problem affected auctions intermittently for approximately two hours on Saturday and five hours on Sunday.
Internet bidding can make a difference in final selling prices, a disappointment to auction houses and consignors. Also disappointed - the would-be bidders. LiveAuctioneers said it had received more than 1,000 phone calls over the weekend from disgruntled bidders.
An eBay spokesperson contacted via email Monday was not familiar with a problem on the live-auction platform.
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