|
eBay finds itself embattled on several fronts today. A French court ordered eBay to pay almost 40 million euros to LVMH for "negligence" and "illicit sales" over the sale of counterfeit goods on its online auction site. And in Australia, sellers loudly complained to government regulators in a conference convened to discuss eBay's bid to go PayPal-only.
eBay, which has long told courts it is a "venue only" in order to limit its liability, brings buyers and independent sellers together. But as the public and world courts have grown less patient with problems of online auction fraud, eBay has increasingly restricted sellers through various Trust & Safety policies.
eBay launched an anti-counterfeiting initiative in late 2006 as designer brands began suing the company over the problem of fakes. eBay further restricted sellers from listing brand name items, including additional restrictions on cross-border trade.
Over the past 2 years, eBay has been moving toward a more restricted system to control counterfeits and fraud. eBay has increased efforts to get sellers to use its own online payment service PayPal through various requirements, such as its "Safe Payments" policy; it also limits buyer protection to PayPal-processed transactions.
In the UK, all sellers are required to accept PayPal, and in April, eBay Australia announced it was going to a PayPal-only marketplace, though the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC) has said it may prevent eBay from doing so.
eBay may be envying its rival Amazon.com, which has a stellar reputation among consumers and processes all payments, including those from third-party merchants.
The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper published a report on Monday's ACCC meeting in Australia, and details of the French court ruling can be found on the wires, such as this Bloomberg report that says eBay will appeal the decision.
|
Email this story to a friend.
| Next Story
Related Stories
eBay Australia Bans All Payment Methods Except PayPal - April 10, 2008, Issue #1766
eBay to Meet with Australian Users over Controversial PayPal Policy - April 11, 2008, Issue #1767
eBay Australia Offers No Seller Protection for 'Pay on Pick Up' - April 14, 2008, Issue #1768
eBay Australia Sellers React to PayPal-Only Policy - April 14, 2008, Issue #1768
Are eBay Australia's New Payment Restrictions Fair Trade? - April 16, 2008, Issue #1770
Australia to Rule on eBay's PayPal-Only Policy in Mid-June - May 21, 2008, Issue #1794
eBay Australia Files Response to PayPal-Only Policy Complaints - May 26, 2008, Issue #1797
Oops! Google Outed in Objection to eBay Oz Policy - May 29, 2008, Issue #1800
eBay Responds in Google - PayPal Showdown - June 11, 2008, Issue #1809
Australia Throws Roadblock in eBay's PayPal-Only Plans - June 12, 2008, Issue #1810
eBay Challenges ACCC Ruling on PayPal-only Policy - June 13, 2008, Issue #1811
eBay Mandates US Sellers Take PayPal if They Ship Internationally - June 16, 2008, Issue #1812
PayPal Clarifies Language in New Policy Update - June 17, 2008, Issue #1813
Developments in eBay Australia Plan to Go PayPal-Only - June 18, 2008, Issue #1814
eBay Australia to Make Its Case to ACCC in Person - June 25, 2008, Issue #1820
eBay Australia Calls Moratorium on PayPal-Only Policy - June 27, 2008, Issue #1822
eBay Cancels Plans to Go PayPal-Only in Australia - July 03, 2008, Issue #1826
ACCC Says eBay PayPal Requirement Not a Concern - July 08, 2008, Issue #1829
PayMate Files Complaint Calling eBay's PayPal Policy Anti-Competitive - July 14, 2008, Issue #1833
eBay Sellers Appeal to Australia Reserve Bank over PayPal Requirement - July 22, 2008, Issue #1839
|
Discuss this story in our forums.
|