Seeing how rapidly Amazon is growing, I am wondering if there is a business opportunity in fighting these counterfeits.
Would you kindly share your Amazon counterfeit story?
How did you know the product was counterfeit?
Was Amazon itself the seller or a 3rd party? If a 3rd party, was it fba/prime?
Reference: https://www.google.com/search?q=amazon+counterfeit+site%3Anews.ycombinator.com
Another seller hops on the product page I created, shipping from China. Google around and learn that I'm supposed to do a test buy to see if it's counterfeit.
Do a test buy, wait ~20 days, get a package with a similar item but totally different packaging and branding.
Okay, cool, obviously fake so let's contact seller support and get this straightened out.
Seller support emails the seller(?!) asking them to provide me with a refund, (which surprisingly they do) and take no further action.
I write in to seller-performance@amazon.com, no response.
To this day, he's still selling on Amazon, but seemingly randomly left my product page a few weeks ago.
I'm told once you have a trademark, Amazon actually takes action, but I was also once told that a test buy is all you need. I'm glad I don't depend on Amazon for my income.
I found this (https://www.amazon.com/Conditioner-Evaporative-Circulator-Hu...) fan/humidifier and the reviews are all for what looks like a lunchbox.
I assume either the company is listing this new product under a listing that already had good reviews, or that the seller of this product bought this page that already had good reviews. Or it could be a genuine mistake but I think it's suspect.
I didn't actually buy the fan so I can't speak to it's quality.
So a system looking for used offering of things not released yet could work.
Back when ebay was new I bought some signed autographs with certificate of authenticity. Certificates were unsigned and didn't mention what they refer to (thus useless), the photos including signature were copies. Sometimes even the "no permission to reproduce" wasn't removed before copying.
I chalked it up to a life lesson. Other than that, never had an issue.
It arrived, and felt like a legit piece of hardware... but after playing with it for a bit. I noticed three things, the blue paint color indicating button functions was slightly different than the ones on my camera, and the patterning on the rubber grips was slightly different than what was on the camera, and the device, although super good quality (that's why I didn't even notice initially) was made of a very tough, heavy plastic, and not the magnesium of the camera body. The box also looked spot on like canon gear. I was faintly suspicious, and started investigating and did a bunch of online searching about things to spot, the proper build materials etc. If I wasn't so picky I think I would have just accepted it. It was indeed a great piece of hardware. It turns out that this was indeed a knock off. A very good one. I ended up informing amazon. They told me they didn't want it back, and sent me a new, legit one. I ended up selling the fake one on ebay, informing the buyers that it wasn't a legit grip, but a very good quality knock off and I made like $100.
When the new legitimate Canon grip arrived, it had the same grip material, same paint, made of magnesium.
So all-in-all I ended up with a legit Canon battery grip for half the price.
Since then learned to be careful (e.g I don’t buy things that seem too cheap to be true, or things I’ve heard are have high fake chances like cr2032 batteries)
...also Adobe master collection CS6: it was a burned disc and in a printed DVD case and was priced at a point that was hard to tell (several hundred bucks but less than retail, think it had a return policy). Technically the license worked and it did work well for about 4 years. Then one day it didn't - from my understanding it was some type of educational license laundered into being sold as a regular product. At that point adobe was all SaaS anyway so from that perspective they solved the fake/laundering license problem.
It arrived in a high-quality box, and looked good. I was initially suspicious because the video outputs didn't match what was advertised, and I had purchased monitor cables based on the outputs I believed the card would have. But the card itself looked OK to someone who didn't know what to look for.
I posted some pictures to Reddit, and they helped me figure out what was going on:
https://www.reddit.com/r/buildapc/comments/5rf36n/simple_que...
I had a really bad time getting Amazon to process the return because it was through a 3rd party.
Finally, gave up and bought same nipples from Target. New nipples feel a lot more like old Slow-Flow nipples. Baby drinks from them just fine.
Amazon has lost me as a customer, will not be renewing Amazon Prime.
But 3 weeks after ordering it, he received a miniature version of it in the mail. It was probably 5 inches tall ... lol. He has stopped buying things online.