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by josephlord
4353 days ago
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Fair enough speed isn't really the criteria. In the Ebay example Ebay know what price they showed the customer on the product page when they went to the checkout and should fulfil it if they can (provided the transaction is completed in reasonable time - a couple of minutes in the book buying world). This is maybe an illustration of the problem with the analogy rather than being a useful insight into the trading system. |
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That said, I'm not an expert in the field, and I've just pieced this information from other posts. I have no strong opinion on the matter, but after throwaway's explanation (and all the subsequent discussion), my uninformed position agrees with his; that this article is exaggerative, and not indicative of anything being 'rigged'.
Moving fast, at least in my opinion, isn't cheating.
If they were raising the price on Ebay in response to the same customer's buy offer on Ebay, I would consider that unseemly, but not even necessarily unfair, as it only assumes that the buyer is willing to pay the newly raised price, and has approximately as much risk of losing the sale as making it.