Dangerous products for sale on Amazon
The platform was found to have 4,152 items that were deemed unsafe by federal agencies, labeled misleadingly, or banned by federal regulators by a report from The Wall Street Journal.
These listings, many of which were changed or taken down after The WSJ alerted Amazon of them, included categories like toys and medications where unsafe products can be particularly dangerous. Nearly half of the products were said to be shipped from Amazon warehouses, and some had even earned the “Amazon’s Choice” badge, reports Business Insider.
Amazon issued a statement in response to the report, laying out the proactive measures it takes to moderate its marketplace including vetting new sellers, continuously scanning its marketplace, and other tactics. It also noted that it invested over $400 million in 2018 to protect its store and customers and to build programs that make sure products on its marketplace are “safe, compliant, and authentic.”
Here’s what it means: Third-party sellers are the driving force behind Amazon’s retail business, but if it’s unable to effectively moderate their listings, it could damage Amazon’s reputation.
If Amazon and other marketplaces begin to be held liable for products sold on their marketplaces by third parties, it would damage the business model’s viability.
In this case Amazon might need to closely review all of the products sold on its platform, which would likely lead to its product selection shrinking significantly, hurting its performance. If all marketplaces face the same issues, the business model itself may become less viable overall, pushing the retail industry away from third-party marketplaces and toward first-party sales.
More Amazon news
Amazon lets US shoppers pay with cash
Amazon brings cash payment option to the US Amazon will let customers buy something online, then visit a Western Union in person to pay with cash. Amazon announced “Amazon PayCode” on Wednesday, which lets shoppers buy something online, then show up at one...
Amazon changed search algorithm to boost its own products
Amazon search system favors products with higher profit margins Amazon began making changes to its search results last year to prioritize profitability over relevance and to boost its own products. According to The Wall Street Journal, Amazon optimized the...
Jack Ma has officially retired from Alibaba
Alibaba begins new era as founder departsJack Ma has officially retired from Alibaba on Tuesday. He celebrated his retirement with a big bash at an Olympic-sized stadium in the company's hometown of Hangzhou.Ma is stepping away from Alibaba at a relatively...