Press Release

Amazon, eBay, Walmart and Wish Are Bad Choices For Black Friday Online Shoppers

E-commerce websites are flooded with counterfeit products, phony reviews, and fraudulent deals

November 25, 2021, Los Angeles, CA – Consumers love a good deal and will flock to the internet for Black Friday bargains. However, online shopping may be risky, dangerous, and little, if any, actual value. A Red Points survey found that 68% of consumers were worried about buying fake or low-quality goods online.

The Counterfeit Report, an award-winning consumer advocate and industry watchdog, has removed over 430 million counterfeit items offered on e-commerce websites, including Amazon, Walmart, Wish, Newegg, eBay and Alibaba. Still, the problem has spiraled out of control as website brand-protection programs are ineffective, dysfunctional, or deliberately obstructive. Over 500,000 brand-owners have signed up to fight Amazon counterfeits, a glaring representation of the enormity of the counterfeit problem and the challenges facing consumers.

E-commerce websites are the perfect free-flowing platforms to enable and facilitate the distribution of an inexhaustible supply of counterfeit, fake, and replica goods -- a $4.5 trillion global criminal enterprise. There is little consequence for the websites, and worldwide sellers operate freely while consumers spend good money on bad products.

Alarmingly, the e-commerce giants usually do not notify buyers they received a fake after receiving brand-owner counterfeit notifications and have skirted secondary liability for enabling the sale of counterfeits.

Before buying online from the e-commerce giants, consumers should consider these facts;

  • The advertised bargain may be no bargain at all. Shoppers may find better deals by carefully shopping competitors.
  • Amazon search results and product reviews are no indication of authenticity or quality, and may not even be related to the product searched. The review systems are awash in fraud, paid endorsements, and manipulation by the e-commerce sites themselves. Worldwide scammers work to outsmart and trick ranking systems with fake reviews and ratings. Amazon and eBay block or remove negative consumer reviews. eBay blocks test purchases by The Counterfeit Report.
  • Amazon is a direct retailer of counterfeit goods; "ships from and sold by Amazon.com" in addition to enabling and facilitating counterfeit goods sales from unvetted worldwide marketplace sellers. Amazon Prime membership, Amazon Warehouse Deals, and the Fulfilled by Amazon ("FBA") offerings are plagued with counterfeit, fake, replica items and illusory endorsements. The coveted "Amazon's Choice endorsement lands on counterfeit and fraudulent products. "Amazon does not manually curate products. There is no unique safety testing for the "Amazon's Choice" products. There is no unique screening for authenticity to receive that badge," testified Amazon VP Dharmesh Mehta.
  • Walmart consumers who believe they are buying legitimate, safe products online may be in for a surprise. Walmart is a direct seller of counterfeit, fraudulent, and dangerous items and allows third-party marketplace sellers to offer goods on its website. The Counterfeit Report purchased dozens of counterfeit or fraudulent computer memory cards, flashlights, and batteries from Walmart as the direct seller.
  • eBay has migrated from the auction house of garage sale items to a global "Marketplace" seller model. Unvetted marketplace sellers are about 80% of eBay business and can sell just about anything they want on eBay, including fakes. eBay sales figures reflect consumer purchases of over 970,000 counterfeit, fraudulent, and replica items from only the tiny sample of products investigated by The Counterfeit Report - who purchased over 2,300 counterfeits from eBay sellers.
  • Alibaba and subsidiary AliExpress are 'go-to" websites for counterfeits and replicas and should be avoided. Both serve as a first-stop for brand-owners to check if their products are counterfeited. This marketplace model landed Alibaba (appropriately named after the fable “Ali Baba and the 40 Thieves”) and some Amazon websites on the U.S. Government's Notorious Markets List -- a designation reserved for the world's most notorious markets for counterfeit goods.
  • Wish.com consumers may be attracted to its brand-name products offered by China sellers at a fraction of retail. Shipping may take weeks or over a month for customers who prioritize savings over speed of delivery. However, many items are counterfeit, fake, or replica products. Wish.com, a 2011 newcomer, built its fast-growing e-commerce businesses by offering a vast range of products that are "discounted" as much as 90 percent.
  • Newegg.com is an American company and direct retailer of items, including computer hardware and consumer electronics. Newegg also enables marketplace sellers, many from China, to offer counterfeit, fraudulent, and replica items. Counterfeit computer memory is not uncommon, and marketplace offerings have expanded to counterfeit auto diagnostic equipment, beauty products, first-aid devices, and fraudulent batteries. The Counterfeit Report removed over 393,000 of 420,000 counterfeit, fraudulent, and replica items identified.
  • A U.S. Government Accountability Office ("GAO") undercover investigation of e-commerce counterfeit goods sales revealed that about 50% of the items it purchased from eBay, Walmart, Newegg, and Amazon were counterfeit.

Consumers would be better served to shop at local retailers or online with the major authorized retailers (Kroger, Costco, Home Depot, Target, Lowes, Best Buy, etc.) offering consumers competitive purchase options for authentic products.






contact us
or

The Counterfeit Report®
PO Box 3193
Camarillo, CA 93010

 
  Member Login  

  Member Login





 

lost password?
Manufactuer of a counterfeited product?
We have a variety of plans and services to promote consumer awareness and protect your brand. Contact us and let us explain how.


Password Reset

Enter your username or complete email address.
A new password will be emailed to you.





Return to Login