StorkBrokers, an online marketplace for child-oriented goods like toys and car seats, announced that it is launching today at the Launch conference in San Francisco.

The site is like a carved out version of the children&'s goods sections on eBay. StorkBrokers also has an iPhone app that&'s supposed to be easier to sell old children&'s goods online. Users snap a photo and set a price and shipping cost for whatever they want to sell, and it goes online immediately.

StorkBrokers is trying to remove the hassle of throwing the same things up on eBay a4a4 which can take a bit longer than StorkBrokers a4a4 and be a bit less sketchy than Craigslist could be a4a4 because anyone is able to communicate on the site without significant moderation. StorkBrokers buyers can also rate other sellers as a way of ensuring the goods that go on the site have some quality.

The site doesn&'t seem that much different from eBay, said Mint.com founder Aaron Patzer, a judge at the conference. He said it was still too complicated to post an item online a4a4 and that the site needed to focus on making it easier to sell things in bulk rather than individually. It was the same problem Etsy, an art selling site, ran into and was able to overcome because it built a strong selling and buying community, he said.

But StorkBrokers co-founder Sterling Hawkins said he wants the site to be a community, not just a place to post things for sale. The site has partnered with moms that actively blog across the country to promote the site and start building up an active community that wants to trade children&'s goods around at a more reasonable cost.

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Tags: children&'s goods, online auctions

Companies: StorkBrokers

Tags: children&'s goods, online auctions

Companies: StorkBrokers

Matthew Lynley is VentureBeat's enterprise writer. He graduated from the University of North Carolina, where he studied math and physics, in May 2010. He has reported for Reuters. He currently lives in San Francisco, California. You can reach him at mattl@venturebeat.com (all story pitches should also be sent to tips@venturebeat.com), and on Twitter at @logicalmoron.

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