We are committed to protecting the intellectual property rights of third parties and to providing our members with a safe place to trade. Infringement is the unauthorised use of other people’s intellectual property – like copyrighted material and trademarks.
Rules that affect what you can sell on eBay
The following items are restricted or prohibited because they would potentially infringe intellectual property rights.
Replica, counterfeit Items and unauthorised Copies
Celebrity material including faces, names and signatures, and autographs
Media - movie prints (35 mm, 70 mm), bootleg recordings, recordable media, promotional copies and downloadable media.
Software including academic software, beta Software, OEM software
Equipment that would support unauthorised copies including mod chips, game enhancers, and boot discs and hardware or software that would enable members to unauthorised copies
Rules that affect how you list items for sale
In an item listing eBay members cannot:
eBay’s VeRo Programme – Reporting Listing Breaches
We created the Verified Rights Owner (VeRO) Programme so that intellectual property owners could easily report listings that infringe their rights.
If you are a Rights Owner and want to report a listing issue, see Reporting Intellectual Property Infringements.
Note: Only the intellectual property rights owner can report potentially infringing items or listings through eBay's VeRO Programme. If you are not the intellectual property rights owner, you can still help by getting in touch with the rights owner and encouraging them to contact us. For a list of rights owners who participate in eBay’s VeRO programme, view the list of About Me Pages.
If your listing was removed through VeRO, and you believe that your listing was removed in error, see How eBay Protects Intellectual Property (VeRO).
To learn how to avoid having your listings removed because they infringe on third party intellectual property take eBay's intellectual property policies tutorial.