Perhaps unsurprisingly, email has started to go out to eBay users from some suspect source that would, in cases of anyone who can't see right through it, grab the new passwords of those who blindly followed the advice it contains.
The one I had starts "Dear eBay customer", this immediately gives it away as a phishing trip by the [child, probably] whose work caused the original breach back in March and confirms that the advice to change passwords is in fact not legit.
Heather, trusting soul as she is, is working in the Schiehallion Field at the moment, on one of her company's decommisioning jobs, so imagine how pissed off she was when - having fallen for the spoof "change your passwords" email - she found that not only had her eBay seller account suddenly sprouted a dozen high value listings in the property section but had also taken on a life its own and wouldn't respond to the new password she'd been mug enough to set, leaving muggins here, back on dry land and with a landline-based broadband connection, to communicate with eBay in order to put this right. The woman in eBay's Dublin call centre reckoned that mine was the latest of at least a thousand similar calls from the .co.uk and .ie eBay sites from those who had fallen for this email.
The apology her account received - this genuinely from eBay and obviously calling her by her name rather than "eBay customer" - came within seconds and offers her a discount on future listing fees for an as yet unspecified period, a cancellation on the fees for the spurious listings which involved several hice and some agricultural land with rights and planning permission and that apology, almost pathetic had it not been for her near miss with several tens of thousands in fees for stuff she doesn't own and hadn't been selling!
CQ out has never looked like a more attractive proposition. The Isle of Wight, off the south coast of Hampshire, has had its own alternative to eBay for a good few years now (Wightbay) and other regional services are now springing up to take on existing eBay business as people grow sick of [eBay's] incompetence. Add to this eBay's current legal troubles that they caused themselves by trying to make a charge for sellers' postage fees - this illegal as only the service provider has the right to take money for handling the mail - and it looks as though the auction site's future in the UK and RoI is very uncertain. Serves the buggers right for being too greedy.