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| Type | Public (NASDAQ: EBAY) |
|---|---|
| Founded | San Jose, California USA (1995) |
| Location | San Jose, California USA |
| Key people | John Donahoe, CEO Rajiv Dutta, President of eBay Marketplaces Meg Whitman, former CEO and board member Pierre Omidyar, Founder and Chairman |
| Industry | Auctions |
| Products | Online auction hosting, Electronic commerce, Shopping mall PayPal, Skype, Gumtree, Kijiji |
| Revenue | $7.67 billion USD (2007) |
| Employees | 15,500 (Q1 2008) |
| Website | www.ebay.com |
eBay Inc. (NASDAQ: EBAY) manages an online auction and shopping website, where people buy and sell goods and services worldwide.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
Founded in San Jose on September 4, 1995 by Pierre Omidyar and Jeff Skoll as Auctionweb, part of a larger personal site that included, among other things, Omidyar's own tongue-in-cheek tribute to the Ebola virus.
The first item sold was Omidyar's broken laser pointer for $14.83. Astonished, he contacted the winning bidder and asked, "did he not understand the laser pointer was broken?" Omidyar received the following email in reply: "I'm a collector of broken laser pointers." (The frequently repeated story that eBay was founded to help Omidyar's fiancee trade PEZ Candy dispensers was fabricated by a public relations manager in 1997 to interest the media. This was revealed in Adam Cohen's 2002 book and confirmed by eBay.)
It officially changed its name to eBay in September 1997. Originally, the site belonged to Echo Bay Technology Group, Omidyar's consulting firm. Omidyar had tried to register the domain name EchoBay.com but found it already taken by the Echo Bay Mines, a gold mining company, so he shortened it to his second choice, eBay.com.
Millions of collectibles, appliances, computers, furniture, equipment, vehicles, and other miscellaneous items are listed, bought, and sold daily. Some items are rare and valuable, while many others are dusty gizmos that would have been discarded if not for the thousands of eager bidders worldwide, proving that if one has a big enough market, one will find someone willing to buy anything. Anything can be sold as long as it is not illegal or on the eBay banned list. Services and intangibles can be sold too. It is fair to say that eBay has revolutionized the collectibles market by bringing together buyers and sellers internationally in a huge, never-ending yard sale and auction. Large international companies, such as IBM, sell their newest products and offer services on eBay using competitive auctions and fixed-priced storefronts. Regional searches of the database make shipping slightly more rapid or cheaper. Software developers can create applications that integrate with eBay through the eBay API by joining the eBay Developers Program. As of June 2005, there were over 15,000 members in the eBay Developers Program, comprising a broad range of companies creating software applications to support eBay buyers and sellers as well as eBay Affiliates.
In June 2004, eBay prohibited the sale and auction of both alcohol and tobacco products on the British site ebay.co.uk. Some exceptions to this rule are made for rare aged liquors, where a bottle may sell for many times higher than its actual value in alcohol.
There has also been controversy regarding items put up for bid that violate ethical standards. In late 1999 a man offered one of his kidneys for auction on eBay, attempting to profit from the potentially lucrative (and, in the United States, illegal) market for transplantable human organs. On other occasions, people and even entire towns have been listed, often as a joke. In general, the company removes auctions that violate its terms of service agreement within a short time after hearing of the auction from an outsider; the company's policy is to not pre-approve transactions. eBay is also an easy place for unscrupulous sellers to market counterfeit merchandise, which can be difficult for novice buyers to distinguish without careful study of the auction description.
eBay's Latin American partner is MercadoLibre.
eBay's main rivals are Amazon.com Marketplace and Yahoo.com Auction.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
A screenshot of eBay's front page.
eBay generates revenue from a number of fees. There are fees to list a product and fees when the product sells. The eBay fee system is quite complex and takes $0.20 to $80 per listing and 3-5% of the final price. In addition, eBay now owns the PayPal payment system which has fees of its own.
The company's current business strategy includes increasing revenue by increasing international trade within the eBay system. eBay has already expanded to almost two dozen countries including China and India. The only place where expansion failed was Japan where Yahoo had a head start.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
eBay has its share of controversy, ranging from its privacy policy (eBay typically turns over user information to law enforcement without a subpoena) to well-publicized seller fraud. eBay data shows that less than .01% of all transactions result in a confirmed case of fraud.
There is one major fraud prevention mechanism: the eBay feedback system. After every transaction both the buyer and seller rate each other. They can give "positive", "negative", or a "neutral" score and leave a very short comment. So if a buyer has problems, he can leave a negative and a comment like "never received product".
Just as in normal retail, mistakes are made on both sides, so even legitimate sellers or buyers may have some negative feedback. Depending on the industry, a legitimate seller or buyer will have roughly 99% positive feedback rate unless they have a small total number of feedback, when only one negative feeback could cause their percentage to go drastically down.
The system can protect buyers. However, buyers must spend a little time learning the system and evaluating each seller.
Many new buyers seem to think they are buying directly from eBay--they are not. Other new buyers seem convinced they will be taken advantage of in any transaction. The latter will often become happy and content eBay users, while the former are often taken advantage of.
When fraud happens a buyer can file a dispute. Of course, all laws still apply and legal action may be possible. However, these methods are somewhat redundant with the feedback system.
One distinct advantage of the feedback system over traditional fraud prevention--i.e. enforcement of the law--is that trivial transactions can be conducted safely. A person in the US can buy a $5 collectable from someone in Russia. If there were a problem, the buyer would not have any practical recourse--she is probably not going to file a complaint in a Russian court for $5. But leaving a negative rating may help warn others that a seller is disreputable.
Another strength of the feedback system is that small, reputable sellers can quickly establish credibility. While in traditional retail credibility is linked to name recognition or with store locations, on eBay people will buy from a no-name business with no-assets or inventory as long as they have decent feedback.
One weakness of the feedback system is that small and large transactions carry the same weight in the summary. This can sometimes lead new buyers to be fooled. Experienced buyers know how to guard against this.
Other such weakness in the feedback system include: people are reluctant to leave feedback first for fear that the other party may leave negative without caring, new accounts that leave negative feedback and then create more new feedback, and people not leaving honest feedback for fear of negative retalitory feedback (including negative in retaliation for neutral).
The following are frauds committed by sellers:
The following are frauds committed by buyers:
Other notable controversies involving eBay include:
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

One of the largest items ever sold was a World War II submarine, sold by a small town in New England that decided it did not need the historical relic anymore.
One of the largest items ever to be put up to auction and not sold was a decommissioned aircraft carrier. The auction was placed by an anonymous seller from Brazil on eBay Motors.
eBay in its earliest days was essentially unregulated. But as eBay grew, it found it necessary to restrict or forbid auctions for various items. Among the hundred or so banned categories (note that these relate to ebay.com (the US site), other regions may vary in their rules) :
As well as a long list of other items that are either wholly prohibited or restricted in some manner. [17]
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

Billpoint was the name of a credit card processing service purchased by online auctioneer eBay in 1998. Billpoint's website was taken offline while eBay integrated Billpoint into their auction service, and it did not debut again until Spring 2000 when it was relaunched as a joint-venture with Wells Fargo bank. In the meantime, online payment service PayPal debuted and became very popular with eBay's customers. eBay and Billpoint spent the majority of the next two years trying to overtake the upstart PayPal but with little success. In July 2002, eBay CEO Meg Whitman struck a deal with PayPal CEO Peter Thiel to acquire PayPal, and when the acquisition was finalized that October eBay began the process of phasing out Billpoint.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
The Bogus Escrow scam is a straightforward confidence trick in which a scammer operates a bogus escrow service.
Escrow services are intended to ensure security by acting as a middle-man in transactions where the two parties do not trust each other. Rather than sending money or goods directly to the other party (which is insecure, as one or other party must send their item first, at the risk that the other party may not then send theirs), both parties send their items to the escrow service, which holds them until both items are received, then sends both items on to the recipient party. If either party fails to deliver their part of the deal, the other party's item will be held at the escrow service and eventually returned to them.
In the bogus escrow scam, a scammer sets themselves up as the recipent of money or goods and then requests the use of an escrow service which is, in fact, operated by themselves. This bogus escrow service can then reassure the victim that the scammer has sent his/her item and that they should send theirs to the escrow service. In fact, this is identical to sending the item to the scammer, who them immediately closes down the escrow service and does not send their item to the victim. The scammer can then pass blame to the escrow service, claiming that his/her item was with them at the time they closed down and he/she has also lost it; if the victim did not investigate the escrow service before using it, they may well believe this.
The bogus escrow scam is popular on eBay, where escrow services are often used for high value transactions. A famous instance of the escrow scam is referred to as P-P-P-Powerbook, in which the USA-based seller of an Apple Powerbook determined that a UK buyer was attempting a bogus escrow scam and took revenge by sending them a cardboard box, the same shape and size as a Powerbook, and overdeclaring its customs value so that the scammer was charged a large amount of duty.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

PayPal is an Internet business which allows the transfer of money between email users and merchants, avoiding traditional paper methods such as checks/cheques and money orders. PayPal also performs payment processing for e-commerce vendors, auction sites, and other corporate users, for which they charge a fee. Corporate headquarters are in San Jose, California; it is now an eBay company.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
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PayPal was founded in December 1998 by Peter Thiel and Max Levchin. One of its first premises was the 165 University Avenue office in Palo Alto, California, home of a number of other noted Silicon Valley startups. On the business side, many of its initial recruits were alumni of The Stanford Review, which was also founded by Peter Thiel. Most of the early engineers hailed from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, recruited by Max Levchin. In its initial incarnation, PayPal was a service for users to send money via PDAs, with actor James Doohan, Star Trek's "Scotty," as its spokesman. The PDA software was later discarded in favor of a web-based system that became popular with eBay's millions of buyers and sellers. Coupled with aggressive marketing campaigns offering $10 (and later $5) for new users to sign up, the firm grew at a meteoric rate of 7–10 percent per day between January and March 2000.
Unknown to many people is the fact that PayPal is one of the few Internet companies which has a single letter domain name, (http://www.x.com) in use. This name was acquired by PayPal in early 2000, when x.com merged with PayPal. [1]
Though growing rapidly, PayPal was losing $10 million a month and was fraught with internal turmoil that led to three CEO changes in its first year of operations. Foreign Mafia rings found ways to steal millions from the young company. And worst of all, eBay launched a payments service named Billpoint to compete with PayPal. Yet the company was able to turn the corner and become the first dot-com to IPO after the September 11 attacks — an accomplishment that ironically backfired when PayPal's new high profile status helped prompt a slew of class action lawsuits and regulatory probes, including one by NY Attorney General Eliot Spitzer. This paved the way for the company to eventually reconcile with its former rival, eBay. [2] [3]
In October 2002 PayPal was acquired by eBay. PayPal had previously been the payment method of choice by over fifty percent of eBay users, and the service competed with eBay's subsidiary BillPoint. eBay has phased out its BillPoint service in favor of retaining the PayPal brand. PayPal's only substantially similar competitor is now BidPay, after Citibank's c2it service closed in late 2003 and Yahoo!'s PayDirect service closed in late 2004. BidPay itself ceased payment operations on the 31st December 2005 but the site remains to carry out any remaining customer service issues .
In 2004, the total value of transactions through the PayPal system was $18.9 billion, up 55% year over year. In January of 2005 PayPal announced plans to pursue the Merchant Services opportunity, the online payments business 'off of eBay'.
Currently, PayPal operates in 190 markets, and it manages over 184 million accounts, more than 73 million of them active. PayPal allows customers to send, receive, and hold funds in 19 currencies worldwide. These currencies are the Australian dollar, Canadian dollar, Chinese renminbi yuan (only available for some Chinese accounts, see below), Euro, pound sterling, Japanese yen, Czech koruna, Danish krone, Hong Kong dollar, Hungarian forint, Israeli new sheqel, Mexican peso, New Zealand dollar, Norwegian krone, Polish zloty, Singapore dollar, Swedish krona, Swiss franc and U.S. dollar. PayPal operates locally in 13 countries.
Residents in 194 markets can use PayPal in their local markets to send money online. These new markets include Peru, Indonesia, the Philippines, Croatia, Fiji, Vietnam and Jordan. A complete list can be viewed at PayPal's website.
PayPal revenues for Q1 2009 were $643 million, up 11 percent year over year. 42 percent of revenues in q1 2009 were from international markets. PayPal's Total Payment Volume (TPV), the total value of transactions in Q1 2009 was nearly $16 billion, up 10 percent year over year.
In 2008, PayPal's TPV off eBay exceeded volume on eBay for the first time. PayPal's Total Payment Volume in 2008 was $60 billion representing nearly 9 percent of global e-commerce and 15 percent of US e-commerce
At an analyst day on March 11, 2009, eBay CEO, John Donahoe announced that PayPal could be a larger driver of revenue than the eBay marketplaces business. RIM announced that PayPal will be the only payment mechanism for its Blackberry App World, which launched on April 1, 2009.
In China PayPal offers two kinds of accounts:
It is impossible to send money between PayPal.cn accounts and PayPal.com accounts, so PayPal.cn accounts are effectively unable to make international payments. For PayPal.cn, the only supported currency is the renminbi.
Although PayPal's corporate headquarters are located in San Jose, PayPal's operations center is located near Omaha, Nebraska, where the company employs more than 2,000 people as of 2007.. PayPal's European headquarters are in Luxembourg and international headquarters in Singapore. The company also recently opened a technology center in Scottsdale, Arizona, and Chennai India.
In the United States, PayPal is licensed as a money transmitter on a state-by-state basis. PayPal is not classified as a bank in the United States, though the company is subject to some of the rules and regulations governing the financial industry including Regulation E consumer protections and the USA PATRIOT Act. On May 15, 2007, PayPal announced that it would move its European operations from the UK to Luxembourg, commencing July 2, 2007 as PayPal (Europe) S.à r.l. & Cie, S.C.A. This would be as a Luxembourg entity regulated as a bank by the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF), the Luxembourg equivalent of the FSA. PayPal Luxembourg will then provide the PayPal service throughout the European Union (EU).
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
PayPal is not subject to regular banking regulations. Because it considers itself to be an 'electronic money transmitter', user rights and safeguards vary.
Controversial aspects of PayPal include the terms of its User Agreement; particularly, for limiting account access and user access to funds. According to the PayPal user agreement, users agree to give PayPal the power to limit access to funds in the account for 180 days. This policy appears to protect PayPal from financial loss in the event of chargebacks or disputes. Banks and financial institutions provide chargeback rights for a specified period of time that varies by the institution. PayPal's account access limitations prevent the movement of funds until discrepencies, or terms of the limitation, are resolved.
In March 2002, two PayPal account holders separately sued the company for alleged violations of the Electronic Funds Transfer Act (EFTA) and California law. Most of the allegations concerned PayPal's dispute resolution procedures. The two lawsuits were merged into one class action lawsuit (In re PayPal litigation). An informal settlement was reached in November 2003, and a formal settlement was signed on June 11, 2004. The settlement requires that PayPal change its business practices (including changing its dispute resolution procedures to make them EFTA-compliant), as well as making a $9.25 million USD payment to members of the class. PayPal denies any wrongdoing.
In September 2005, PayPal suspended an account (opened by Something Awful owner Richard Kyanka) used to collect donations for the American Red Cross to help Hurricane Katrina victims. After receiving over $30,000 USD in donations in 9 hours, PayPal locked-down the account. To re-activate the account, PayPal demanded "proof of delivery", even though no products were being sold. Kyanka asked PayPal to transfer the funds to the Red Cross; PayPal said they couldn't do this, but could give the money to United Way (a rival charity collecting for the same cause, that had an undisclosed agreement with PayPal). Kyanka originally agreed to this, but after learning of the United Way's prior legal troubles, he asked PayPal to refund all the donations. It's unclear whether simply waiting for PayPal to reach a decision in regards to the account would have resulted in PayPal allowing the money to eventually reach the Red Cross. [4] [5] [6]
PayPal's Seller Protection policies do not cover intangible goods or goods that are "not as described".
PayPal does not allow people from certain countries to use its services, and in some occasions where it does, it only allows the participants to send and not receive. This has brought criticism from people from within these countries.[7]
In August 2005 eBay required that sellers who accept PayPal not refuse credit card payments, which result in transaction fees. [8] Beginning in January 2006, eBay now prohibits any online payment system other than Paypal, as stated here[9]. This is due to the wide numbers of fraudulant online payment methods.
EBay lists Bidpay.com as the only alternative, but that company's demise predates this policy. Questions of illegality and antitrust have been raised over this new rule, mostly by merchants who believe they shouldn't have to pay for a legitmate service and abused the personal account status on PayPal. EBay specifically prohibits E-gold, a PayPal competitor with high fraud history. Ebay's new policy states that accepting a non-PayPal online payment system could result in the user's account being banned. Since PayPal only works in certain countries, Ebay's policy limits participation to the countries that PayPal supports.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
| Maintainer: | SightSpeed Inc. |
| Stable release: | Template:Latest stable release/SightSpeed [+/-] |
| Preview release: | Template:Latest preview release/SightSpeed [+/-] |
| OS: | Cross-platform |
| Genre: | videotelephony/P2P/VoIP/Instant messenger |
| License: | Freeware |
| Website: | www.sightspeed.com |
SightSpeed is a free Internet video conference software that uses a proprietary artificial intelligence algorithm to remove unimportant information from images. It claims to be able to transmit 30 frame/s live video over a typical ADSL connection with little time lag.
Using a unique codec based on pixelwise compression, instead of mpeg-type, frame-based compression, SightSpeed essentially only transfers the pixels that experience a change of state on screen. If the background does not change much, it will not be updated very frequently, except for where change does occur.
This means that the moving objects experience fluid, 30 fps video. The efficicent codec also reduces the amount of lag to a level that is imperceptible to the human brain.
SightSpeed's video codec was originally developed at Cornell University's Discover Lab.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
Developer(s) Skype Limited
Initial release August 2003 (2003-08)
Stable release 5.3.0.111 (Windows)
5.1.0.922 (Mac OS X)
2.2.0.25 (Linux) (April 20, 2011; 4 days ago (2011-04-20) (Windows)
April 14, 2011; 10 days ago (2011-04-14) (Mac OS X)
April 6, 2011; 18 days ago (2011-04-06) (Linux)) [+/−]
Preview release [+/−]
Written in Embarcadero Delphi / Objective-C (Mac OS X/iPhone) / C++ with Qt4 (Linux)
Operating system Cross-platform
Available in Multilingual
Type Voice over Internet Protocol / instant messaging / videoconferencing
License Freeware (with some paid features)
Website Skype.com
Skype is a proprietary peer-to-peer Internet telephony (VoIP) network, founded by Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis, the creators of KaZaA and competing against established open VoIP protocols like SIP or H.323. The Skype Group is headquartered in Luxembourg with offices also in London and Tallinn. The system has a reputation for working across different types of network connections (including firewalls and NAT) because voice packets are routed by the combined users of the free desktop software application. Skype users can speak to other Skype users for free, call traditional telephone numbers for a fee (SkypeOut), receive calls from traditional phones for a fee (SkypeIn), and receive voicemail messages for a fee.
In a deal generally criticised by many as overpriced [1], eBay has acquired the company for $US 2.6 billion in cash and stock, plus an additional 1.5 billion in rewards if goals are met by 2008. [2]
Skype Version 1.2 for Windows was released in March 23, 2005. Its most significant new feature is the provision of centrally-stored contact lists so that a user's contact information is available from any computer that is connected to Skype (in other previous versions, contact information was stored on the local computer).
On 2006-01-05, version 2.0.0.69 of Skype was released.
Versions now exist for Microsoft Windows (Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows CE (Pocket PC)), Mac OS X and GNU/Linux. The Linux version runs on FreeBSD through its Linux binary compatibility.
In 2006, a now-discontinued feature called "Skypecasting" was introduced. It allowed recordings of Skype voice over IP voice calls and teleconferences to be used as podcasts. Skypecasts remained in beta until its end. Skypecasts hosted public conference calls, up to 100 people at a time. Unlike ordinary Skype p2p conference calls, Skypecasts supported moderation features suitable for panel discussions, lectures, and town hall forums. Skype operated a directory of public Skypecasts. Skypecasts was discontinued as of 1 September 2008.
Throughout 2007 updates (3.1, 3.2 and 3.5) added new features including Skype Find, Skype Prime, Send Money (which allowed users to send money via PayPal from one Skype user to another), video in mood, inclusion of video content in chat, call transfer to another person or a group, and auto-redial. Skype 2.7.0.49 (beta) for Mac OS X released adding availability of contacts in the Mac Address Book to the Skype contact list, auto redial, contact groups, public chat creation, and an in-window volume slider in the call window. During several days in August, Skype users were unable to connect to full Skype network in many countries because of a Skype system-wide crash which was the result of exceptional number of logins after a Windows patch reboot ("Patch Tuesday"). And in November, there was controversy when it was announced that users having London (020) 7 numbers would lose them.
In 2008, Skype released various updates including versions for the Sony PSP hand-held gaming system, version 2.0 for Linux with support for video-conferencing, and version 4 for Windows (with both a full screen and a compact mode). This version dropped support for the "Skype Me" presence indicator, which meant that a user was interested in receiving Skype calls from a non-contact. Skype also discontinued its SkypeCast service without explanation and added internal monthly and daily usage caps on their SkypeOut subscriptions, which had been advertised as "Unlimited". Many users and observers had commented on the high rate of dropped calls and the difficulty reconnecting dropped calls. Skype was used in the seventh season of the U.S. syndicated version of the British game show Who Wants To Be a Millionaire in a new Ask the Expert video chat lifeline. In October, analysis revealed TOM-skype—the Chinese version of Skype run by TOM Online—sends content of text messages and encryption keys to monitoring servers.
In 2009, Skype 4 was released, the Linux client was updated, and Skype for SIP, a service aimed at business users, was launched. At that time around 35% of Skype's users were business users. In April 2009, eBay announced plans to spin off Skype through an initial public offering in 2010. In August, Joltid filed a motion with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, seeking to terminate a licensing agreement with eBay which allows eBay (and therefore Skype) to use the peer-to-peer communications technology on which Skype is based. If successful, this may have caused a shutdown of Skype in its current form. In September, eBay announced the sale of 65% of Skype to a consortium of Index Ventures and Silver Lake Partners. Early in September, Skype had shut down the Extras developer program. In November, eBay completed the sale of 70% of Skype to a consortium comprising Silver Lake Partners, CPPIB, Andreessen Horowitz, and the original founders valuing the business at USD2.75 billion.
In 2010, a report by TeleGeography Research stated that Skype-to-Skype calls accounted for 13% of all international call minutes in 2009; out of the 406 billion international call minutes a total of 54 billion were used by Skype calls. In May, Skype 5.0 beta was released, with support of group video calls with up to four participants. Also in May, Skype released an updated client for the Apple iPhone which allowed Skype calls to be made over a 3G network. Originally, a 3G call subscription plan was to be instituted in 2011, but the plan was eventually dropped by Skype.
On 9 August 2010, Skype filed with the SEC to raise up to $100 million in an initial public offering. In October 2010, Skype announced it had named Tony Bates as their CEO; Bates has been a senior VP at Cisco and responsible for its multi-billion-dollar enterprise, commercial and small business division.
On 14 October 2010, Skype 5.0 for Windows was released with a number of improvements and feature additions, including a Facebook tab to allow users to SMS, chat with, or call their Facebook friends via Skype from the News Feed. This version dropped support for the "Search for Skype Users" option.
On 14 January 2011, Skype announced the acquisition of Qik which is a mobile video sharing platform.
Phone companies have traditionally charged users a large amount, often proportional to the distance, for long distance calls. Skype, arguably the first major VoIP software, allowed people to talk over the Internet for free. This led to many home users with broadband capability to switch to Skype for placing their calls over the Internet. Skype being secure and encrypted end-to-end, has also attracted large corporations who are beginning to switch from their traditional phone companies for their internal calls. Phone companies were all of a sudden out of favor in the markets which patronized Skype.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
The eBay description scam is a confidence trick carried out via eBay. Sellers sell worthless items with descriptions carefully written to suggest that they are actually valuable ones. Although similar scams have occurred in markets and retail, usually blocked via a Trade Descriptions Act, eBay remains an easier target: firstly, because it allows description to be entered freely; and secondly, due to the fact that eBay's search is keyword based, it is standard practice for legitimate eBay sellers to "pad" item descriptions with extra keywords in order to attract buyers who may not have entered the exact description of the item.
When the item is finally sold and the buyer discovers what the actual item is, he or she frequently objects, but the seller can claim that the description was accurate to the item.
Several examples of the descriptions used in this scam: