Uppsala BildTeknik wrote:
Lets say a guy place a plain old bid, $100. OK, I am the winner, nobody else is bidding, I will win this, great! The last seconds are ticking away and a sniping software wins the auction for $105. No fun for the guy hoping to get the item for $100 or something like that, nobody else was bidding so he thought he would win...
If he thought the item was worth more than $100, he can only blame himself for underbidding. If he thinks the item is worth less than $105, he bid correctly and should be happy. In either case, the market functioned perfectly.
Uppsala BildTeknik wrote:
Same scenario, he places a bid: $100. OK. good, he is the winner so far, 3 days before the auction ends someone bids over him, so he tops the bid, is overbid, now he bids $150, he is immediately overbid and bids $170. Now he is the winner again because the opponent only wanted to pay $165 for the item. The auction ends and he is the winner (or he would have been the loser if he didn´t want to outbid the guy placing the Ebay maximum bid, he had the chance to do it but chose not to).
Exactly the same case. His real bid was $170. Why did he place the bid in increments starting at $100 if he really thought the item was worth $170?
Uppsala BildTeknik wrote:
See the difference here? Or do you still think it is exactly the same?
Same... My question is, why isn't the guy using sniping software? ;)
EDIT: Consider this case, which I believe is monobath's example: The starting price of a given item is $100. I am willing to pay $150, so I make a proxy bid on day one of $150, which puts my initial bid at $100. At the very last second, with $100 showing, somebody's sniper software puts in a bid for $145. I still win. IMHO, there is never a good reason to use what you describe as a "plain old bid" of $100 on an item you are willing to pay $150 for when proxy bidding is not only available on ebay, but standard behavior.
What's the main reason I use sniping software? I don't like watching auctions, and I don't like planning my life around their end time. If I just called it "bidding software" I bet it wouldn't provoke such a reaction.