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  2. Double auction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_auction

    A double auction is a process of buying and selling goods with multiple sellers and multiple buyers. [1] Potential buyers submit their bids and potential sellers submit their ask prices to the market institution, and then the market institution chooses some price p that clears the market: all the sellers who asked less than p sell and all buyers who bid more than p buy at this price p.

  3. eBay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EBay

    eBay office in Toronto, Canada. eBay Inc. (/ ˈ iː b eɪ / EE-bay, often stylized as ebay or Ebay) is an American multinational e-commerce company based in San Jose, California, that allows users to buy or view items via retail sales through online marketplaces and websites in 190 markets worldwide.

  4. EBay added $3 billion in market value in one day—thanks to ...

    www.aol.com/finance/ebay-added-3-billion-market...

    EBay’s stock price rose nearly 10% on Wednesday—one of its largest single-day increases in years—boosting the company’s market cap by about $3 billion to $33 billion.

  5. Order (business) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_(business)

    From a buyer's point of view it expresses the intention to buy and is called a purchase order. From a seller's point of view it expresses the intention to sell and is referred to as a sales order. When the purchase order of the buyer and the sales order of the seller agree, the orders become a contract between the buyer and seller.

  6. EBay v. Bidder's Edge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EBay_v._Bidder's_Edge

    eBay v. Bidder's Edge, 100 F. Supp. 2d 1058 (N.D. Cal. 2000), was a leading case applying the trespass to chattels doctrine to online activities. [1] [2] In 2000, eBay, an online auction company, successfully used the 'trespass to chattels' theory to obtain a preliminary injunction preventing Bidder's Edge, an auction data aggregator, from using a 'crawler' to gather data from eBay's website.

  7. eBay Enterprise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EBay_Enterprise

    On July 16, 2015, the Permira-led consortium of buyers including Sterling Partners, Longview Asset Management, Innotrac, Inc., and companies owned by Permira funds began the process to buy the company. [22] On November 2, 2015, the sale was finalized for $925 million and eBay Enterprise became an independent company. [23]

  8. Bulk purchasing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulk_purchasing

    Bulk purchasing also enables greater resilience, such that bulk buyers are able to build stockpiles of necessities. During the COVID-19 pandemic, bulk purchasing also contributed to better health outcomes by decreasing the overall number of trips to the grocery store, thus lessening opportunities for exposure to SARS-CoV-2. Since lower-income ...

  9. Tying (commerce) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tying_(commerce)

    Tying (informally, product tying) is the practice of selling one product or service as a mandatory addition to the purchase of a different product or service.In legal terms, a tying sale makes the sale of one good (the tying good) to the de facto customer (or de jure customer) conditional on the purchase of a second distinctive good (the tied good).