Amazon to halt third-party delivery service that competes with UPS and FedEx
Amazon is taking a break from its two-year-old Amazon Shipping pilot program in the U.S.—in a move seen as potentially benefiting package giants UPS and FedEx.
The company announced that it’ll pause the program, known as Amazon Shipping, starting in June, reports Forbes.
Under the program, Amazon drivers would pick up packages from businesses and deliver them to consumers, rather than ship orders from Amazon warehouses.
“We understand this is a change to your business, and we did not take this decision lightly,” Amazon said in a note to shippers, writes Marketwatch. “We will work with you over the next several weeks so there is as little disruption to your business as possible.”
Amazon did not specify when and if it might restart the program.
More Amazon news
Amazon Alexa listens and transcribes everything you say
Amazon Alexa transcripts cannot be deleted You can delete voice recordings so Amazon can't listen to your conversations with Alexa anymore, but text records are a different story. Amazon doesn't need to hear your voice recordings to know what you've said....
Jeff Bezos unveils plans to send a spaceship to the moon
"It's time to go back to the moon, this time to stay" The billionaire unveiled his unmanned lunar lander Blue Moon and spoke of his hopes to send people to the moon by 2024. Jeff Bezos has announced he is going to send a spaceship to the moon, reports SKY...
Amazon may have fully automated warehouses in 10 years
It’s going to be a while before the robots take over The future of Amazon will undoubtedly involve artificial intelligence and robotics, but it’s an open question at what point AI-powered machines will be doing a majority of the work. According to Scott...