I to saw this. Had some communication with the guy and on first reply I was sure it was to good to be true . I hit the likely scam button right away.:nono:
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I to saw this. Had some communication with the guy and on first reply I was sure it was to good to be true . I hit the likely scam button right away.:nono:
AD-4NA - I was saving lots of photos for research but had stopped saving BSA No. 4 Mk.I (T) photos due to the great quantity. I am thinking I should save a couple of distinctive photos each time so if a rifle reappears on the market I can check to see if the seller is using a different seller’s photos. That would be a 99% indication that it was a scam. The other 1% would be honest sellers who don’t know how to use a camera. ;-)
That would be laudable if you chose to do it. They always seem to choose just a few of the beginning overall shots of the rifle from the real auction. Strangely enough usually I've had even more luck reverse searching the descriptions that they lifted literally verbatim without putting in any effort from somewhere else than the images.
Using both techniques should help weed out the scammers.