Amazon Fakes, Fraud and Scams Await Black Friday Shoppers
Consumers easily deceived by counterfeit products, phony reviews and fraudulent deals.
November 14, 2018, Los Angeles, CA – Black Friday shoppers looking for a good deal on Amazon may get much less than they bargained for. Consumers can no longer expect that Amazon is a safe and honest marketplace to buy authentic, safe goods -- it's not. When shopping on Amazon, the mantra of the day is clearly "buyer beware."
Amazon offers its illusory policy; "Products offered for sale on Amazon must be authentic. The sale of counterfeit products is strictly prohibited." However, Amazon reports that they receive an infringement notice for 1 of every 100 customer page views, and over 100,000 brands have signed in to fight counterfeits on Amazon -- a shocking revelation of the enormity of Amazon's counterfeit problem.
Amazon's marketplace is a free-flowing conduit that enables and facilitates the exact same "bad actors" who have long polluted China's e-commerce ecosystem to flood Amazon with counterfeit, fake and replica products.
The Counterfeit Report, an award winning consumer advocate and counterfeit watchdog, has removed over 43,000 counterfeit items on behalf of brand owners from Amazon's 13 global websites. Shockingly, counterfeit listings could remain for weeks, even months, despite hundreds of repeat infringement notices. Sellers often remained and relisted the items. Manufacturers simply don't have the time or resources to struggle with Amazon's dysfunctional system, and consumers are left unprotected.
Still, Amazon takes a transaction fee for each counterfeit item sold, while skirting secondary liability for the sales. And, while Amazon collects half of every U.S. retail dollar spent online, Amazon didn't pay any federal income taxes after topping $5.6 billion in profit in 2017.
Consumers may place confidence in Amazon's guarantee; "We stand behind the products sold on our site with our A-to-z Guarantee." That could be true, but only if consumers were informed by Amazon (or knew) they received a counterfeit product. However, Amazon does not notify consumers they received a fake, even after being notified by the brand owner.
Consumers would be better served to shop online with the major retailers (Kroger, Costco, Home Depot, Target, Lowes, Best Buy, etc.) who offer consumers competitive online purchase options.
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