Individual listings on ebay prove little or nothing. ... Furthermore, other potential bidders get scared off when they see certain items realizing high prices. It creates a yo-yo effect in the short term...
-Yes I think the more dodgy listings we see the more buyers back off on buying online paper money
... I agree with how "much ado about nothing"
Kinda makes me feel a little ill that someone paid $600 for this.
It simply isn't good for the hobby because we:
... can't figure why some people give so much importance to and are ready to pay an hefty premium for a note with a simple printing variation, well within the normal process ... It's far off to be an real error... and I think it's a shame for the legitimate error field.
I believe it could also be the result of "shill bidding" (bidding by the seller from different ebay accounts) or bidding by 2 very novice "wanna-be" collectors who have a lot of change to spare. I actually feel worse about the 2nd worse-case scenario, but I guess it could be true and I'm sure this will only have a "yo-yo" affect on the ebay market (as mmars suggests).
Whatever the case may be we should see it as a "red flag" for a particular auction listing.
We should be asking ourselves "would this listing pass the mustard at a live auction?" Would 2-3 collectors/dealers agree with the importance/rarity of this note?
Other problematic listings:
lightly printed right or left SN being touted as "errors" (& other minor printing variations)
regular numbered notes being dubbed as low numbered, rotators, repeaters & radars
regular prefixes being labelled short/rare prefixes or change-over prefixes
notes being passed off as "inserts" (typically falling a factor of 10X short of the established insert ranges)
Modified 1954 notes being dubbed as "Devil Faces"
If you are unsure about the validity of a listing on any online auction site you could always ask for advice on this forum