bidding, the Auctioneer determines the winner. En-
glish auctions on the other hand are open bid, and al-
low bidders to bid multiple times. In a traditional of-
fline English auction, sniping cannot occur. Sniping is
a feature unique to online auctions. Sniping behaviour
blurs the boundaries of an online auction between the
type of auction it is and the rules that govern it.
6 SIPHONING
Siphoning (or bid siphoning) refers to the situation
where an outsider observes an auction and contacts
bidders offering them an identical item at a better
price. The outsider is referred to as a siphoner, and is
said to “siphon” bids from the auction. The siphoner
benefits in that he/she does not incur any of the costs
involved with organising and advertising an auction.
Siphoning disadvantages the Auctioneer through
lost revenue. That is, the siphoner does not have to
pay the Auctioneer to list/advertise an item. Siphon-
ing also disadvantages the seller whose auctions are
being siphoned. This is in a form of price under-
cutting (i.e., the siphoner offers the item at a better
price), and reduces the demand for the seller’s items.
A bidder who does business with a siphoner loses the
protection offered by the auction, and exposes them-
selves to fraud (e.g., misrepresented or non-existent
items).
Siphoning may also be used in conjunction with
shilling. When a shill bid accidentally wins, the seller
of the item can contact the next highest bidder, and
directly offer them the item. This saves the seller the
time and expense of re-auctioning the item.
Consider the following scenario: A seller is auc-
tioning off a traditional Japanese sword. A legitimate
bidder enters a bid for $1000. The seller then enters
a shill bid for $1200. The legitimate bidder refrains
from bidding and the shill bid wins. Later on the le-
gitimate bidder is approached by the seller. The seller
claims that the winner is a dead beat
6
, or has backed
out of the deal due to financial or other personal rea-
sons. The seller then offers the item to the bidder at,
or near, the bidder’s price of $1000.
Siphoning combined with shilling disadvantages
both the bidders and the Auctioneer. Bidders are
forced into paying an inflated price due to the shill
bids. The siphoning component this time does not
affect the seller, but rather the Auctioneer. This is be-
cause the seller does not have to repeat the auction and
is denying the Auctioneer revenue from listing fees.
The seller in effect has “siphoned” bids from his/her
own future auctions.
6
A bidder that has won an auction and to fails to make
payment.
Siphoning is impossible to detect by the Auctioneer
alone. Instead bidders must report the behaviour once
it has happened to them. However, most bidders are
aware of what siphoning is, and probably wouldn’t
recognise that they have been siphoned. Furthermore,
if a bidder receives a better price, or an item they re-
ally want, then they would not see such behaviour as
undesirable. In this case they are unlikely to report it.
There is no clear law regarding siphoning. The
only advice to bidders is to decline communication
with anyone that contacts them outside of the official
channels. In addition, if you were not the winner of
an auction, don’t accept an item from the seller after
the auction has ended.
7 NON-EXISTENT OR
MISREPRESENTED ITEMS
A dubious seller might attempt to auction a non-
existent item, or misrepresent an item. In the first
instance, the seller accepts payment from the buyer
but doesn’t deliver the item. In the second, the seller
misrepresents the item by advertising it as something
it isn’t, or delivers an item of lesser value. In the shill
case described in Section 4, the men misrepresented
paintings as being significant works when they were
inexpensive replicas (see (Schwartz and Dobrzynski,
2002)).
To ensure that an item conforms to its description,
eBay recommends that buyers study the seller’s pho-
tos. However, this is unsatisfactory as the seller can
simply copy pictures from a legitimate item, and post
these for the non-existent/misrepresented item.
eBay also recommends asking the seller questions
regarding the item. However, a seller may simply lie.
Furthermore, some bidders might be reluctant to ask
questions as they desire anonymity. For example, if
the bidder has a high profile, they might want to con-
ceal the fact that they are bidding. This might oc-
cur in the case where the bidder feels that their pri-
vacy would be compromised in some manner (e.g., re-
veal that they have a fetish for an item), change other
bidders’ perceptions of the item (e.g., stimulate un-
wanted bidding), or influence the seller to raise the
reserve price.
Another recommendation is to check seller feed-
back. eBay has a system where buyers and sellers
can leave feedback regarding their dealings with each
other. A party to a transaction can rate their experi-
ence as either good, neutral or bad. An individual is
given a rating based on the feedback received. How-
ever, feedback ratings are not a reliable measure of
an individual’s integrity, and feedback can be falsely
generated using multiple bidder accounts.
Online auctioneers offer a dispute resolution proce-
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