Listings are not evidence.
A listing is a seller-controlled presentation. Evidence means current photos, documents, terms, seller responses, and a path to independent verification.
Market education
The internet shows listings. It does not create confidence. Rare-goods buying needs a file that separates seller claims, evidence, price signals, and decision risk.
A listing is a seller-controlled presentation. Evidence means current photos, documents, terms, seller responses, and a path to independent verification.
Asks can be stale, aspirational, condition-adjusted, or unsupported. A file separates visible pricing signals from seller anchors.
A strong seller path helps, but it does not replace independent verification for watches, jewelry, designer goods, or collectibles.
A marketplace listing can still have weak photos, unclear return terms, missing documentation, and seller-path questions.
DayRove can flag visible risk and evidence gaps, but the buyer controls authentication, appraisal, inspection, payment, and final decision.
The useful output is a decision file: what was checked, what held up, what needs evidence, and what should happen next.
Better output
A useful file shows what was checked, what held up, what needs evidence, what should be avoided, and what the buyer should do next. It can recommend proceeding, asking for more evidence, negotiating, waiting, revising, or walking away.
Boundary
DayRove does not authenticate goods, appraise value, hold inventory, custody funds, process payments, act as escrow, guarantee seller legitimacy, guarantee availability, guarantee pricing, or represent buyers or sellers.