+86 15546883080 (China mainland) +852 6554 1700 (Hong Kong)  [email protected]

Amazon to be held liable for defective third-party products

California appeals court subjected Amazon to strict liability for defective products sold by third parties on its marketplace.

The case was filed by Amazon customer Angela Bolger who purchased a replacement laptop battery from Hong Kong-based company Lenoge Technology (E-Life on Amazon’s marketplace) which allegedly exploded and caused her severe burns, reports Quartz.com.

A trial court ruled that responsibility lay not with Amazon but the third-party seller.

The appeals court saw it differently. “Whatever term we use to describe Amazon’s role, be it ‘retailer,’ ‘distributor,’ or merely ‘facilitator,’ it was pivotal in bringing the product here to the consumer,” the ruling stated.

In other words Amazon didn’t merely allow the publication of a product listing but actively stored and shipped the battery in Amazon packaging, writes tamebay.com.

The court also recognized that a buyer can’t communicate directly with a retailer but is forced to do so through the Amazon site with all communications ‘anonymized’.

It must be noted that Amazon will require third-party sellers to disclose their names and addresses, starting from September, 1. This new policy is aimed to help businesses fighting fraud or taking legal action against sellers over counterfeit goods.

Amazon appealed California court’s decision, saying that it wasn’t liable because it didn’t distribute, manufacture or even sell the product.

If Amazon’s appeal is unsuccessful, its business could be dealt a significant blow. If the ruling stands, it opens Amazon to liability in other instances too, such as sales of counterfeit items on its marketplace.

More Amazon news

Major shutdowns in China due to new COVID outbreaks

Major shutdowns in China due to new COVID outbreaks

Multiple companies in Zhejiang province have suspended operations due to COVID-19 outbreak, halting production of goods from batteries and clothing to textile dyes and plastics. Zhejiang is one of China's biggest and busiest manufacturing hubs.  The local government...

read more
Amazon is using sellers as a cash cow

Amazon is using sellers as a cash cow

Amazon collects a third of seller revenue A new study claims that Amazon makes far more from fees on its Marketplace platform than even the cash cow known as AWS, reports TechCrunch. According to the report by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, sellers now give...

read more
Inflation spreads to e-commerce

Inflation spreads to e-commerce

A recent report by Adobe shows that e-commerce is experiencing many of the same pricing pressures in the broader economy due to supply chain problems, higher shipping and labor costs. Online prices rose 1.9% in October from a year earlier and 0.9% from the previous...

read more