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Sorry, no. I'm just not liking the possibility of random early endings that could exclude bidders. |
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I've wondered about the notion of having indefinite auctions along with timed-duration bids, particularly for valuable but obscure items. A part for a rare pinball machine may be worth $100 to someone who needs it, but such a person may only come along once every few months. If such a person saw such a machine listed, he may not want to wait a few months for a long-term auction to expire. He could post an offer that was good for, say, a week; the seller could either accept the offer or decline it. If the seller did not accept the offer within a week, the person making the offer would have no further obligation. |
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This is a bad idea - the best auction
strategy is when everyone knows what's
happenning (game theory and all that
schtuff). |
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Well, in theory, everyone knows that things become indefinite 10 minutes either side of close. |
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That fits in with game theory, doesn't it? |
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Some people will risk waiting, some people will bid immediately -- and drive up prices. |
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There will be a static fallout that some people will measure and take advantage of. |
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I don't think this will do anything other then make online auctions other then more of the miserable time-wasting experience they already are. |
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What if the auction ends anytime within a 10 minute window after the posted time? So you set the auction to end at 10:00:00, then the auction can end then or any time until 10:10:00? Plenty of time for last ten minute bidding, but might stop a sniper. |
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I thought "end times" meant something else, which is why I thought this must be some way of getting eBay to determine the date of the apocalypse. |
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