This rule work for me:
Only buy/bid if you think the price is good
If it smell fishy don't bid. More auctions will come.
If the seller have to pump an auction the product is not worth the money.
That's a nice perspective, but I feel it does not solve the core problem, that when suddenly one or two newbie accounts appear out of nowhere bidding up an auction, it will always leave an unpleasent taste for the other bidders. - Which can be harmful not only for the bidders but for the auction creator.
Personally I believe there is no way to fully
solve this problem, but some basic measures that can help reduce it. I like to do the following in auctions:
- reserve the right to not accept bids from accounts with negative trust (if some of the previous bidders speaks out about it during auction, that would be a reason for me, or if I do some post/trust research about the bidder and get a bad feeling from it)
- a) ask for a pre-deposit to be made from new or inactive accounts OR b) exclude accounts that are too young or have too low of a rank OR c) have a minimum of copper membership - personally I would go (and have in the past) with the 2nd
But as Chris (BP) and Krogoth pointed out, to a certain degree
it comes down to trust in the end. I personally feel hesitant to bid on auctions where I am worried shill-bidding might happen. So when I see a newbie account with a total of 9 posts suddenly making a bid of several $100 USD I am usually out - unless I have high trust in the auctioneer (because I know him/her personally or because I know someone personally that met that person and had a positive opinion about this person).
That's why I wouldn't want these accounts to bid on my auctions, too - I feel it harms the trust from the community too much, and as someone who loves to create crypto art, the last thing I would want is people having that same bad feeling I would get when seeing these 'suspicious' bids in one of my auctions.
Oh sorry, it's a long ramble.
Interested to see if someone comes up with a solution for the shill problem.