Ebay Australia battles shonky sellers

Online trading site eBay Australia has installed new software to help reduce fraud, following moves by its other sites to crack down on dodgy sellers.

Earlier this week eBay's chief executive Meg Whitman told shareholders at the company's annual general meeting in the US that the new software was helping the auction site make "major strides" in reducing fraud.

Kaye Dewar, community development director at eBay Australia, said the Fraud Automated Detection Engine (FADE) had been used in Australia for a number of weeks.

FADE is an internally developed application, which the company began testing about six months ago. The software collects data from defrauded customers, tracks it in a central database, and then predicts which new sellers are likely to be illegitimate.

Dewar said FADE alerted the company of potentially fraudulent sellers, allowing it to look more closely at both the listing and the seller.

EBay Australia won't reveal how many potentially fraudulent sites it has halted. Dewar added that she couldn't go into much detail about how the system worked, because of compromising the protection of its member base.

"We've got zero tolerance for fraud," Dewar said. "We use a variety of fraud detection tools and mechanisms that have been effective at detecting potentially fraudulent sellers."

Whitman said the technology has already helped eBay reduce its fraudulent sales rate, which she said is at less than one-tenth of one percent. Whitman said the software's ability to spot criminals will get better as the database of fraudulent sales grows.

But eBay spokesman Kevin Pursglove emphasised that FADE would not automatically bar sellers based exclusively on their geography, merchandise category or other demographic information. "We know we've got to be careful," Pursglove said after the shareholder meeting in the US. "The reality is that everyone starts at zero, with a clean record."

eBay tightly guards data about fraud and doesn't disclose lists of hot spots for fraudulent sales, Pursglove said.

Anecdotal evidence suggests that a disproportionate percentage of fraud happens from sales that originate from sellers in Eastern Europe. Pursglove also said that higher-priced items, such as computers and other electronics goods, have a higher rate of fraud than collectibles such as Pez dispensers and Beanie Babies. Technology products, ranging from Sun Microsystems servers to Dell Computer laptops and a variety of smaller electronic gadgets, constitute the largest category of goods sold on eBay.

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Talkback 2 comments

    this comment is in relivent to ...Anonymous -- 12/06/02

    this comment is in relivent to ebay fraud may be someone should crack down and set up site where a dealler who is a crack and a fraud conman what ever you want to call them ny way bk on track set up a site where there names are listed soi people can either add the name or once they have 10 negitive feed bk with the same compliant they are placed on this site. thats all i have to say

    Ebay AUSTRALIA and crime, WHAT A JOKE.... Anonymous -- 13/03/07

    For a company that boasts about it daily T/O, there security is very average, i was just robbed like hundreds of others, not by several fraud sells, just one. the same guy has been robbing people on ebay for over 4 years, have the presses charges? what about all there rules? can they stop him,, NO, there to stupid to,

    even after telling ebay,
    about another account of his i noticed, it is still active, 3 days after reporting it,,,,, with the same address, hopeless, more like it and if i was a share holder i would be after blood,

    I posted a warning on the ebay forum to warn other "HONEST EBAY CUSTOMERS" and was told to not do that or "i would get banner",,, ebay need a real wake up to themself,
    For a listed company they have a legal obligation, bugger there rules they mean nothing, and get with the real program,

    if you protect the criminals and punish the innocent, then you are nothing but a criminal yourself,

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