masterosok
Gawd
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2008
- Messages
- 969
If anyone that upgraded is selling their old 970 or 290x let me know
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It's from the $143 970 price match.Uhhhh. You bought the wrong card.
You mean "spies".my Best Buy has Hardforum users....
You mean "spies".
Here we go again, this is crazy lol
That's precisely the problemAnyone who gets tricked into a price match based on a printout from a random person may get fired from their job later.
Does Best Buy actually sell these high end GPUs in store. Basically is it worth it to check one out locally? From what I remember years ago they only had low end cards for high prices.
Does Best Buy actually sell these high end GPUs in store. Basically is it worth it to check one out locally? From what I remember years ago they only had low end cards for high prices.
Damn I wish i would have saw this yesterday. $67 is a damn steal and of course it is out of stock in Madison Heights, Mi.
Nahhhh, not a price mistake you're missing out on, this right here is just a little bit of fraud...You're more than welcomed to join All you need to do is find a dumb cashierWhat the heck? Is that some kind of mistake? There is a Microcenter in VA quite a few hours from me but I would've driven it if it had been in stock.
Nahhhh, not a price mistake you're missing out on, this right here is just a little bit of fraud...You're more than welcomed to join All you need to do is find a dumb cashier
Nahhhh, not a price mistake you're missing out on, this right here is just a little bit of fraud...You're more than welcomed to join All you need to do is find a dumb cashier
Damn I wish i would have saw this yesterday. $67 is a damn steal and of course it is out of stock in Madison Heights, Mi.
Damn I wish i would have saw this yesterday. $67 is a damn steal and of course it is out of stock in Madison Heights, Mi.
Curious as to why you think the link is fraud?
Legal Lesson:
Five separate elements of fraud:
(1) A false statement of a material fact - e.g. The card is available at MC for the $236.54 price
(2) Knowledge on the part of the defendant that the statement is untrue - e.g. Use an unsearchable, never in stock at that price link to show to employees of other store.
(3) Intent on the part of the defendant to deceive the alleged victim - e.g. "Find the dumbest looking associate" and get them to price match a price known to be OOS and unsearchable.
(4) Justifiable reliance by the alleged victim on the statement - e.g. Show "dumb" associate the price and claim it is a legitimate price at MC thus meeting their price matching criteria
(5) Injury to the alleged victim as a result - e.g. BB/Staples take a loss on the card honoring a fraudulent price match inquiry
No, they were never in stock. It's an old stock item still lingering in their systems that are no longer sold but automatically updated. The page isn't available through MC's system but indexed via Google, which is how people are finding these "deals."Where was MC actually selling these cards? I didn't check every store on the list but they seemed out of stock... everywhere.
Legal Lesson:
Five separate elements of fraud:
(1) A false statement of a material fact - e.g. The card is available at MC for the $236.54 price
(2) Knowledge on the part of the defendant that the statement is untrue - e.g. Use an unsearchable, never in stock at that price link to show to employees of other store.
(3) Intent on the part of the defendant to deceive the alleged victim - e.g. "Find the dumbest looking associate" and get them to price match a price known to be OOS and unsearchable.
(4) Justifiable reliance by the alleged victim on the statement - e.g. Show "dumb" associate the price and claim it is a legitimate price at MC thus meeting their price matching criteria
(5) Injury to the alleged victim as a result - e.g. BB/Staples take a loss on the card honoring a fraudulent price match inquiry