By Erin Kim @CNNMoneyTech August 16, 2012: 4:27 PM ET
Starting in September, eBay is blocking the sale of potions and other magical goods.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — Sorry, love spell vendors: eBay is cracking down on the sale of magical wares.
Beginning in September, the site is banning the sale of “advice, spells, curses, hexing, conjuring, magic, prayers, blessing services, magic potions, [and] healing sessions,” according to a policy update.
The company is also eliminating its category listings for psychic readings and tarot card sessions.
The update is a part of a “multi-year effort…to build trust in the marketplace and support sellers,” eBay (EBAY, Fortune 500) wrote in its company blog.
Has anyone actually been buying magic on eBay? It seems so: The site’s “spells and potions” category currently has more than 6,000 active listings and happy feedback from quite a few satisfied buyers.
“Best spell caster on Ebay,” one customer wrote after a recent purchase.
“Wonderful post-spells communication!” another raved. “We bought 4 spells! Highly Recommend!”
Spells and hexes aside, eBay is rolling out a long list of rule tweaks, as it does several times a year. For example, buyers will now be required to contact sellers before getting eBay involved with any issues regarding a purchase. Sellers will also be subject to a fee for ending an auction earlier than planned.
EBay also banned the sale of “work from home businesses & information,” a category that is often abused by scammers.
EBay isn’t the only online marketplace culling its listings. Etsy, a platform for homemade goods, also recently prohibited the sale of various items, including drug paraphernalia and body parts.
First Published: August 16, 2012: 4:27 PM ET
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Etsy blocks sales of drugs and human remains
By Erin Kim @CNNMoneyTech August 10, 2012: 5:55 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — Etsy has become the go-to spot for homemade jewelry, knickknacks and household goods. Apparently, some have also been using the online marketplace to sell everything from drugs to human remains.
Now Etsy is cracking down.
The online marketplace recently revised its policies, excluding from its list of sellable items such products as tobacco, hazardous materials and body parts. (Hair and teeth are still OK).
“Odd as it may sound, we’ve spent long hours over the past several months extensively researching some offbeat and fascinating topics, from issues surrounding the sale of human bones to the corrosive and toxic properties of mercury,” the company wrote on its official blog on Wednesday.
Etsy says the changes are made in order to comply with legal rules and restrictions.
“But beyond that, when it comes right down to it, some things just aren’t in the spirit of Etsy,” the online company wrote. “While we understand that it is possible for certain items to be carefully and legally bought and sold, Etsy is just not the right venue for them.”
The new policy prohibits the sale of human body parts, including but not limited to “things such as skulls, bones, articulated skeletons, bodily fluids, preserved tissues or organs, and other similar products.”
Etsy banned most drug paraphernalia, though the company said it is not explicitly banning the sale of medical drugs. Instead, it’s asking that sellers remove any claims of “cure or relief of a health condition or illness.”
That set off a slew of angry posts from Etsy sellers in the company’s public forums.
“Now I need to change near[ly] a quarter of my listings or remove them,”wrote Etsy user Chrissy-jo, who operates an online store called KindredImages. “How am I going explain the use of a salve or even an aromatherapy eye pillow without making the claim that it aids in healing wounds or it helps relieve migraines?”
Another Etsy user named Irina, who runs PheonixBotanicals, wrote: “As an herbal crafter, I find the idea of being banned from listing traditional uses and folklore of plants quite disheartening.”
Sellers on Etsy operate their own shops, where they vend goods that are usually homemade. The online store plans to reach out to individual sellers to ask them to either remove a problematic listing or make changes to align with the company’s policy.
First Published: August 10, 2012: 4:10 PM ET