It's because I'm replying to separate people in separate posts.. kinda like above.Old RV Ag said:
OP - 25 posts on this thread alone. Have you seen someone for OCD?
OCD?? says the one who actually counted my posts lol.
It's because I'm replying to separate people in separate posts.. kinda like above.Old RV Ag said:
OP - 25 posts on this thread alone. Have you seen someone for OCD?
Well, one boob .... OPBenFiasco14 said:
3 pages and no boobs ...
BenFiasco14 said:
3 pages and no boobs ...
I did provide a card. I removed the card info after I listed my ticket because I didn't see any reason why they needed my card, being a seller. I don't particularly make it a habit of leaving cc info in accounts for things I rarely use.wbt5845 said:
I'm curious how you listed something and got away with not providing credit card. I lost stuff on StubHub frequently and have to have a CC on file.
62strat said:
End of the day, the buyer backed out before I my deadline to deliver my end of the deal, so screw em.
I didn't list them incorrectly. I listed them as mobile transfer, 2 days before show at the latest. The day I got my ticket from TM, I could have transferred it to him and been within this deadline.meggy09 said:62strat said:
End of the day, the buyer backed out before I my deadline to deliver my end of the deal, so screw em.
End of the day you incorrectly listed your tickets. Who cares who cancelled, you should be fined.
Not only that, someone paid you $500 and your solution was "let's just wait until 2 days before the show and see what happens".
BenFiasco14 said:
No tits, no advice.
unfortunately, no I couldn't have. I disputed it with them, and now it's 2-3 weeks for a reply.bmks270 said:
You could have had this resolved in less time than you've spent complaining about it here.
I didn't receive any money for the sale. That would have happened after I transferred the tickets. If I received $425 and never transferred tickets, I'd be sending the money back with no issue.Ragoo said:
Be sure to call the IRS next and report the $425 net. It's on the internet now.
62strat said:I didn't receive any money for the sale. That would have happened after I transferred the tickets. If I received $425 and never transferred tickets, I'd be sending the money back with no issue.Ragoo said:
Be sure to call the IRS next and report the $425 net. It's on the internet now.
reading = difficult.
he's dumbT Durden said:62strat said:I didn't receive any money for the sale. That would have happened after I transferred the tickets. If I received $425 and never transferred tickets, I'd be sending the money back with no issue.Ragoo said:
Be sure to call the IRS next and report the $425 net. It's on the internet now.
reading = difficult.
I thought you said you made more selling it to someone on Texags.
oh, yeh, I sold it personally. But how does that involve my anticipated net from a stubhub sale that never happened, as Ragoo seemed to allude to?T Durden said:62strat said:I didn't receive any money for the sale. That would have happened after I transferred the tickets. If I received $425 and never transferred tickets, I'd be sending the money back with no issue.Ragoo said:
Be sure to call the IRS next and report the $425 net. It's on the internet now.
reading = difficult.
I thought you said you made more selling it to someone on Texags.
I alluded that you sold tickets for profit, profit that should be reported to the IRS as income.62strat said:oh, yeh, I sold it personally. But how does that involve my anticipated net from a stubhub sale that never happened, as Ragoo seemed to allude to?T Durden said:62strat said:I didn't receive any money for the sale. That would have happened after I transferred the tickets. If I received $425 and never transferred tickets, I'd be sending the money back with no issue.Ragoo said:
Be sure to call the IRS next and report the $425 net. It's on the internet now.
reading = difficult.
I thought you said you made more selling it to someone on Texags.
YOU ARE WRONG! Now I will submit 45 separate, multi-paragraph replies with citations, visual aides, and peer-reviewed sources proving that I am in the bottom tenth-percentile of Texags posters in terms of exhaustingness.ac04 said:
strat is high in the running for most exhausting poster on texags. i knew what this thread would be instantly when i saw who OP was.
62strat said:The issue is, why can a buyer just cancel a ticket in the first place? Seems too easy to cancel something you bought and then later regretted.coastsrs said:62strat said:He was guaranteed a ticket, by 9/7, through stubhub's guarantee protection. Say he shows up to chase center per my request, and I'm no where to be seen. He gets a replacement ticket, or a refund. he canceled on 8/29.coastsrs said:
I would cancel as well if i wasnt guaranteed a ticket. Whats so hard about that?
Im not risking a maybe for something im willing to pay $500+ to see.
Problem is, he resold it, so he was getting scared of making his own deadline I'm sure!
Well im more willing to buy ag to ag than stubhub, especially if the SH seller started changing xfer means and methods.
He should be paying the fee, not me. Stubhub has no record of conversation between the buyer and me (I asked guy on phone. He said the buyer simply told SH that I contacted them. Phone guy kept saying 'whatever you said to buyer I guess he didn't like).
So who is to say this guy just regretted his purchase (because maybe he tried flipping it and was forced to sell at a loss since demand went way down as time went on), so he tells SH, hey this guy contacted me, he violated policy, cancel it. He gets off scott free, and I'm stuck with a fee? And remember it wasn't cancelled sa soon as I emailed buyer. It was 7 weeks later.
That's bs. I don't think I clearly and undoubtedly violated a policy. Sure, I emailed him and asked him questions and probably put some doubt in his head, but I still had time to deliver and fulfill contract.
So you posted a ticket for sale that you couldn't actually sell. The buyer paid for it, and you didn't send the ticket, and didn't bother to let him know you weren't sending the ticket, and then he canceled the sale when he didn't receive it?62strat said:Honestly I didn't feel like wasting min. 30 minutes of my day trying to correct an accounting error that was not the result of any action on my part.Moxley said:Quote:
On 10/30 I get an email from stubhub saying contact them immediately because I owe them $463 due to an error in my listing, and I have no card on file for them to charge. they threaten to send to collections and suspend my account. I ignore it.
Had you contacted them immediately (as they suggested) you may have been able to explain the situation and have the charge removed or significantly reduced.
Brian Earl Spilner said:So you posted a ticket for sale that you couldn't actually sell. The buyer paid for it, and you didn't send the ticket, and didn't bother to let him know you weren't sending the ticket, and then he canceled the sale when he didn't receive it?62strat said:Honestly I didn't feel like wasting min. 30 minutes of my day trying to correct an accounting error that was not the result of any action on my part.Moxley said:Quote:
On 10/30 I get an email from stubhub saying contact them immediately because I owe them $463 due to an error in my listing, and I have no card on file for them to charge. they threaten to send to collections and suspend my account. I ignore it.
Had you contacted them immediately (as they suggested) you may have been able to explain the situation and have the charge removed or significantly reduced.
Did I get any part of that wrong? Because if not, it seems like you're the one who made the mistake, not stubhub.
Brian Earl Spilner said:So you posted a ticket for sale that you couldn't actually sell. The buyer paid for it, and you didn't send the ticket, and didn't bother to let him know you weren't sending the ticket, and then he canceled the sale when he didn't receive it?62strat said:Honestly I didn't feel like wasting min. 30 minutes of my day trying to correct an accounting error that was not the result of any action on my part.Moxley said:Quote:
On 10/30 I get an email from stubhub saying contact them immediately because I owe them $463 due to an error in my listing, and I have no card on file for them to charge. they threaten to send to collections and suspend my account. I ignore it.
Had you contacted them immediately (as they suggested) you may have been able to explain the situation and have the charge removed or significantly reduced.
Did I get any part of that wrong? Because if not, it seems like you're the one who made the mistake, not stubhub.
brutal ownage here. I'd bet the OP comes back to argue with you because you completely dismantled him.ATM9000 said:62strat said:The issue is, why can a buyer just cancel a ticket in the first place? Seems too easy to cancel something you bought and then later regretted.coastsrs said:62strat said:He was guaranteed a ticket, by 9/7, through stubhub's guarantee protection. Say he shows up to chase center per my request, and I'm no where to be seen. He gets a replacement ticket, or a refund. he canceled on 8/29.coastsrs said:
I would cancel as well if i wasnt guaranteed a ticket. Whats so hard about that?
Im not risking a maybe for something im willing to pay $500+ to see.
Problem is, he resold it, so he was getting scared of making his own deadline I'm sure!
Well im more willing to buy ag to ag than stubhub, especially if the SH seller started changing xfer means and methods.
He should be paying the fee, not me. Stubhub has no record of conversation between the buyer and me (I asked guy on phone. He said the buyer simply told SH that I contacted them. Phone guy kept saying 'whatever you said to buyer I guess he didn't like).
So who is to say this guy just regretted his purchase (because maybe he tried flipping it and was forced to sell at a loss since demand went way down as time went on), so he tells SH, hey this guy contacted me, he violated policy, cancel it. He gets off scott free, and I'm stuck with a fee? And remember it wasn't cancelled sa soon as I emailed buyer. It was 7 weeks later.
That's bs. I don't think I clearly and undoubtedly violated a policy. Sure, I emailed him and asked him questions and probably put some doubt in his head, but I still had time to deliver and fulfill contract.
Lol the balls on you buddy. I work in a heavy exchange driven business. If a party ever calls an exchange or a 3rd party and puts delivery of something in peril, you don't just wait to see what happens... you take swift action to find a replacement or your reputation is in peril.
From your perspective, I'm sure you think you did the noble thing by giving everyone a heads up that you may need to come up with a different way to deliver. Reality if you look at it from more than just your side of things is there was one weak link in the transaction and it wasn't the buyer or the exchange, it was the numbnuts who ultimately communicated that he wasn't sure what he actually owned and, as a result, created more work for all of the parties involved and exposed the exchange to changes in the ticket market. The moral thing to do is step up and pay your medicine for not doing the work to figure out what you owned prior to opening the window to set the transaction on fire.
When the cancellation took place is a red herring to the situation.
It isn't a BS policy... penalties need to be harsh when you run an exchange like Stubhub to ensure the integrity of the market.