BREAKING: Effective Tuesday, June 2, 2026, PSA is temporarily pausing new submissions for the four Value service tiers: Value Bulk, Value, Value Plus, and Value Max.
https://t.co/cleLKHtu2o
Well. I decided to try a car rip. It did not disappoint. This was the result out of the first pack of a bowman blaster. No car pics because I was terrified id damage it 🤣 @CardPurchaser
@KelVarnsenCards Anyone who can be that rude isn't anything to worry about. Something definitely off in his life. I gave you a follow so now according to this guy you have 201 followers 🤣
🚨Probstein BUSTED?!🚨
Rick Probstein spent 21 years on eBay, selling nearly $1 billion worth of cards. Last month, he took the leap & launched his own auction platform: Snype.
On Monday, as the first auctions closed, everything fell apart.
"We're experiencing a system-wide technical issue due to high volume," the official statement read.
But that wasn't the real story.
A Pokemon forum user discovered something far worse: Snype's entire backend database was exposed to the open web. No authentication required.
Anyone with basic technical knowledge could access:
Full bidder & consignor information Names, emails, addresses Birthdates & payment information Complete bid histories
All of it. Just sitting there.
But the security breach wasn't even the worst part. The exposed database revealed something damning: multiple accounts shared addresses linked to Probstein, his wife, & known scammer Kevin Burge.
One account placed 11,277 bids. The username? "Hunny Bunny." The email address? Rick Probstein's.
In total, 1,331 auctions were allegedly impacted. Total bids placed across them: 29,000, totaling $1.28M in bids. 96 auction “wins” are attributed to the flagged accounts.
Every suspicious account was verified as a "Super Bidder"—a status requiring eBay feedback and industry references.
But the eBay usernames provided? They don't exist. The industry references appear fabricated.
The hobby is in the middle of a shill bidding crisis. Pryan. Dr. Beckett. Fanatics Collect marketplace. All under fire for auction manipulation.
And now Rick Probstein—appears to have launched a platform specifically designed to facilitate shill bidding while leaving customer data completely exposed.
Found this at the bottom of some totes I got from a collection purchase. No COA with it. What are the odds its real? Can any experts help? @CardPurchaser