eBay shuts down Mir auctions

Published: 26 March 2001 y., Monday
eBay shut down some 15 to 20 auctions listing pieces of Mir, company spokesman Kevin Pursglove said. Bidding on one of the auctions reached more than $15,000 before San Jose-based eBay shut it down. We're trying to remove them as fast as we can," Pursglove said. "They're pretty easy to remove because we can make a pretty good guess that they are a prank or the sellers are not the rightful owners." Most of the 143-ton Mir station disintegrated when it hit the atmosphere, but up to 28 tons of debris was expected to survive the flames. That debris, some of it expected to be in 1,800-pound chunks, splashed down in the South Pacific waters between New Zealand and Chile. The debris hit the Earth's surface at 650 to 1,000 feet per second--fast enough to smash through a block of concrete six feet thick. Trying to auction pieces of Mir is only the latest prank pulled by eBay sellers. Last year, in the midst of the confusion over who won the election, one eBay seller put the U.S. presidency up for sale. In 1999, a rash of pranks plagued eBay, as sellers listed 500 pounds of marijuana, a human kidney and an unborn baby.
Šaltinis: news.cnet.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The Most Destructive Viruses of All Time

With the SQL Slammer virus, more than 500,000 servers worldwide were infected, there was a general slowdown all over the Internet more »

The proposal

KGB in Belarusian web more »

ICANN approves six user community groups

Organization takes first step toward giving individuals a voice in how the Internet is run more »

U.N. tech summit ends

Many tough decisions deferred for 2 years more »

Microsoft brought legal action

Lindows.com ordered to drop Lindows name more »

PayPal Slashes Micropayments Fees

PayPal wants a slice of the online music pie more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Europe 'broadband revolution' leads the world

The future is burning bright for the ICT manufacturing and services across the European Union as the continent enjoys a "broadband revolution" and takes up global leadership in the mobile sector more »

Sweden proposes drastic fines for spammers

The Swedish government tabled a draft law that would allow it to to crack down on people who flood email inboxes with unwanted advertisements, so-called spam. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »