07-01-2026 9:21 PM
I spent a few hours doing photos and AI research on two antique paper knives and thought one was ready to go. Only it wasn't. It was a bladed item so, to sell it on eBay, I had to specify an Age Verification service. Fair enough, that is the Law. So I tried to find out from Royal Mail with no success, then I tried eBay Help. My own attempts to set an Age Verification Postal Policy were not accepted. A whole day I'll never get again. Multiple attempts to take a call which all failed.
The idea that a NED is going to buy an antique paper knife on eBay to go around stabbing people with is ridiculous when all he needs to do is buy a good sharpener and get a dinner knife from the kitchen. Our lawmakers are such snowflakes.
08-01-2026 9:23 AM
I tried to sell a ceremonial cake knife but gave up in the end.
08-01-2026 11:53 AM
There is an appeals process for items that violate eBay policy. I have used it in relation to a set of pliers - yes pliers! ( Are pliers a popular weapon of choice for the modern yob?)
I suspect I got the negative response because the agent picking up the email just couldn't be bothered.
Why can't they be bothered? - possibly because staff are inundated with similar complaints and appeals and under pressure to clear them, which they do by any means.
09-01-2026 1:09 AM
Perhaps Reform will clear out lots of this legislation like this which at first glance is benign but is ridiculous and harmful.
09-01-2026 9:51 AM
We can only hope so, theres a lot to fix.
09-01-2026 3:32 PM
I'd try to sell them via an antiques shop or auction if they're valuable, if not keep em. We live in a daycare centre nowadays, not regarded are adults any longer by govt and corp, so look for other alternatives.