This article investigates the numerous transactions of artefacts associated with Long Kesh/Maze on the eBay website. Based on 12 months of data collection, recording all the objects listed for auction that were associated with history of Long Kesh/Maze, Purbrick’s research demonstrates how conflict heritage exists outside of the official domains managed by heritage professionals and policy-makers. Her study reveals how the past is embedded in everyday life, via domestic internet use in this case, which offers an alternative heritage practice to the hesitancy and silence surrounding the site of Long Kesh/Maze itself. The article was initially presented as a paper at the Scars symposium held at the University of Bristol (2009), which formed part of the War and Culture Studies Traces of Conflict programme.