eeun, on Wed Jan 25, 2012 1:02 PM, said:
Underball, on Wed Jan 25, 2012 12:32 PM, said:
and I'm sorry but the whole idea of "Crapping up a thread" is ludicrous. It's a message board. You're supposed to post messsages that are relevant to the thread title. That's the whole point of posting on one of these boards. To exchange information. Encouraging people not to post makes no damn sense.
It makes a lot of sense. I moderate the Marketplace section on another computer board, and we discourage "PM Sent" posts.
Why? Because the marketplace section is different from the other sections of the board. It's intended for the sole purpose of selling items and is
not an area for discussions. Long threads of
PM Sent and other comments conveys
nothing about whether the item is sold or pending, but it makes any potential buyer scroll through the thread to see whether the seller posts that the item is sold. Unless the post asks or conveys additional information about the item (eg, where are you located? Is it the Rev. 1 or 2 board) it's just noise in a thread that benefits from being short and to the point.
As others have suggested, put the onus on the seller. Sold the item? Post that it's sold. Now everyone knows.
I ran into a similar discussion in which someone angrily insisted that if you put an item on your ebay Watched list, you should be obligated to place a bid otherwise you were somehow being deceitful.
Ditto!
There is no reason to clog up a post so the next person has to page through it, especially when there is more than 1 item.
It is up to the seller to post that the item is sold.
Waaa! If you didn't get there first, it happens to me all of the time, I don't like it, but it's just life. Go post for one in the Wanted section.
You will run into the same problem if you send a PM after someone else, but before they got back to the thread to type 'PM sent.'
How can you honestly post 'PM sent' until you send the PM?
If someone types 'PM sent', it doesn't mean anything, because it could just be a question or the seller could turn down the offer.
At least typing, "I'll take it." indicates you actually want to buy it, but doesn't mean you will.
Making these types of posts, might put off someone else from sending an offer thinking an item is sold when it isn't, and cause the seller to miss a sale.
Again... when the item is sold it is up to the seller to say so.