@DPCreations wrote: Details are relevant as they determine the outcome. As for the product, it would be extremely suspect as a scam as electronics are discounted and buyers purchase items at prices too good to be true. Why do you think it was a scam and why didn't you think it was a scam when you made the payment? More details are missing. An invoice with details and pictures missing should be a warning. If the dispute is for item not received and there was no tracking, then it should be a simple win with buyer protection. If the dispute is for item not as described, then the outcome would be uncertain and no buyer protection. Detals matter. "Too good to be true" is exactly the correct phrase. The price was very good, but not completely unreasonable; if it had been I would not have fallen for it. I have a few reasons to call it a scam. First, communication from the seller stopped after I'd paid him, he'd been quite communicative until that point. Second, like I mentioned in the original post, a number of other people hadn't received purchases from this person. The seller emailed me photos of the item when I requested them. I made sure to do a reverse image search to be safe and nothing turned up, which is why I didn't think it was a scam before payment. The item hasn't been received and there isn't any tracking, hopefully it makes for as simple a win as you say.
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