Actor wrote: Only because the lawyers do not see it as a lucrative field.
Any time there is a relationship between parties there is always the chance that one of the parties can be held legally responsible for the actions of one of the other parties. Buyer/seller/eBay/PayPal is a four way relationship. If your purchase of a $100 S8 cam goes sour and you want to sue eBay you probably have to do it in small claims court in San Francisco. Not worth the hassle. On the other hand a dispute involving a $14,000,000 jet would probably bring the lawyers running.
But we're talking about two totally different things. You're talking about what it would take to interest a lawyer to get involved. As you say, if enough money is on the line, a lawyer might try anything. What I am talking about is how the general public views liability based on common sense and a decent set of ethics.
Ebay merely rents the advertising space, just like a television station lets advertisers buy air time. If a local car dealer decides to run a fraudulent ad on a car he doesn't really have to sell, how is the television station responsible? It isn't. Could a lawyer get involved and attempt to make a case that it is simply because the station has deep pockets? Sure. Anyone can sue anyone for any reason. Because of that, most law suits aren't about justice but, rather, how much hassle one person can cause another financially until one party gives up. Thus, even if a lawyer successfully navigated a loop hole that somehow made the station part liable in this particular case it is a one time technical victory, not an ethical precedent, because common sense is often at odds with legal judgements. Long after the trial is over, common sense will still (hopefully) govern most people's actions, except for the few that always feel their problems are the responsibility of others around them.
Roger
http://www.moviestuff.tv