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Piracy Games

Amazon Responds After Third-Party Sellers Put Bootleg Games on Its Store (venturebeat.com) 91

Jeff Grubb, reporting for VentureBeat: Over the weekend, some thrifty gamers spotted a deal on Amazon. A downloadable version of the tough strategy survival sim Frostpunk was available on the Amazon Marketplace from a third-party seller for $3, which is a 90 percent discount from the standard $30 price. But after looking into the game, some customers who dropped the three bucks had some questions. For example, why does the metadata for this version of Frostpunk refer to the DRM-free version that people can buy from GOG. [...] So I reached out to Amazon, and it provided the following statement from a company spokesperson: "Our customers trust that when they make a purchase through Amazon's store --either directly from Amazon or from its third-party sellers -- they will receive authentic products, and we take any claims that endanger that trust seriously. We strictly prohibit the sale of counterfeit products, and these games have been removed." That's all it would say on this.
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Amazon Responds After Third-Party Sellers Put Bootleg Games on Its Store

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  • by olsmeister ( 1488789 ) on Wednesday July 18, 2018 @12:10PM (#56968848)
    And the sellers have been removed as well?
    • And the sellers have been removed as well?

      Probably not... and they probably wouldn't have removed the games if public attention hadn't be made. They don't care about sellers selling counterfeits- they do care about the public knowing it though.

      • Probably not... and they probably wouldn't have removed the games if public attention hadn't be made. They don't care about sellers selling counterfeits- they do care about the public knowing it though.

        Pretty much this. From board games to clothing to unlicensed materials, Amazon only seems to take fakes seriously if someone raises enough of a stink about it in the media.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by BigBlockMopar ( 191202 ) on Wednesday July 18, 2018 @01:59PM (#56969600) Homepage

        Popping up as a new one. It is not as of their stock has been confiscated. Nothing a bit of scripting could not handle.
        Because it all depends how much they get, not how much they did not get.

        I bought a microSD card from Amazon and I got a fake labeled with more capacity than it really had. Amazon really didn't care; they got their commission. I had to fight to get a refund from a Chinese seller who is still ripping people off many years later.

        I will never buy from Amazon again.

        You can say what you want about Walmart and Home Depot and other retailers, but bricks-and-mortar retailers hate thieves more than anyone else. If they accidentally sell counterfeits, they take it very seriously.

        Jeff Bezos may be the richest man on the planet but I feel like he's one of the most unscrupulous. I wish only the slowest and most painful of cancers on him.

        • That is part of the reason I shop for a good amount of things locally. While the microcenter branded SD, microSD, and USB drives aren't quite as cheap as the cheapest ones on amazon it isn't a crap shoot with what I am getting either. Add in that if one craps out I can get it exchanged so I end up getting a better overall product and experience. I've never had one crap out on me as I find they are usually too small to keep using long before that happens but it is nice that if one fails after 6 months I coul
          • Some people shop locally, find what they want, then buy on Amazon. I do it the opposite way, I find a product on Amazon, read the reviews, check out the user guide, then do a search to see who has it locally and go there.

            • Some people shop locally, find what they want, then buy on Amazon. I do it the opposite way, I find a product on Amazon, read the reviews, check out the user guide, then do a search to see who has it locally and go there.

              Amazon: the world's greatest catalog. I like it. :)

    • by rsborg ( 111459 )

      Best if Amazon removes itself from the counterfeit scene.
      Of course, that would dent their ability to be the "everything store".

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Wednesday July 18, 2018 @12:12PM (#56968862)
    >> "We strictly prohibit the sale of counterfeit products, and these games have been removed." That's all it would say on this.

    What else did they need to say? Someone violated their policy and they bounced them.

    Just be careful out there: when buying from Amazon/Walmart/NewEgg, NEVER buy from ANY of the marketplace folks and use the vendor filters if necessary, and they'll eventually just go away on their own.
    • >> "We strictly prohibit the sale of counterfeit products, and these games have been removed." That's all it would say on this.

      What else did they need to say? Someone violated their policy and they bounced them.

      Except, they didn't say that at all!

      • by Xenx ( 2211586 )

        >> "We strictly prohibit the sale of counterfeit products, and these games have been removed." That's all it would say on this.

        What else did they need to say? Someone violated their policy and they bounced them.

        Except, they didn't say that at all!

        That was a direct quote from an Amazon spokesperson. It came from the article, and even made it into the summary. I don't see how you can say they didn't say that.

    • Just be careful out there: when buying from Amazon/Walmart/NewEgg, NEVER buy from ANY of the marketplace folks and use the vendor filters if necessary, and they'll eventually just go away on their own.

      This doesn't work with Amazon due to comingling with 3rd party vendors who use Amazon for fulfillment. To improve the efficiency of their logistics, everything gets thrown into one virtual and many physical bins, I'm not even sure they maintain any traceability. So when you think you're buying it from them,

  • Amazon sells anything they can get paid for. They really don't care, just like their customers.
    • The real problem is that Amazon runs on the cheap. They don't do quality control like screening products being sold or police third-party sellers effectively. They may have some algorithms, but they're not very effective. Instead, they rely on buyers or other third parties to blow the whistle on scams. Sometimes they screw up and block legitimate third-party sellers or self-publishers. And they make it hard to complain effectively or reach a human because that would cost them money.
      • Perhaps they should hire some people to do it then. Everyone would be rightly pissed if Target or Walmart was selling knockoff Chinese laptop chargers in their brick-and-mortar stores, yet they seem to be able to avoid this, and they have less cash and more overhead than Amazon.

        • by Xenx ( 2211586 ) on Wednesday July 18, 2018 @02:35PM (#56969806)
          Brick and mortar stores don't inspect each and every product as it comes into the store. That would be insane. Brick and mortar stores get their shipments from trusted sources and assume they won't get screwed over.The only way for Amazon to do the same would be to not allow 3rd party sellers at all.

          First, unless it goes through an Amazon warehouse, the product is handled and shipped by the third party. Amazon is only the store front. Second, the third party could always provide correct samples to Amazon while then provide fake ones to the customer, unless they manually test each and every product(Would be counter to the first point). Third, if it comes to digital products, the people they hire would have to be very knowledgeable about every digital product they check. They would also need to buy multiple copies of the product through "personal" accounts to verify they're getting what the customer gets and that each time it matches up. Then, determine if the digital product they receive is correct and contact the developer/producer/etc and verify. Again, this would be for every seller of every product.
          • by DogDude ( 805747 )
            Brick and mortar stores don't inspect each and every product as it comes into the store.

            That's bullshit. I work in an independent briack-and-mortar chain with 30,000 SKU's, and we know each and every product we bring in.

            Why are you so eager to defend Amazon, which is clearly interested in screwing over its customers? Amazon could absolutely verify all of the products they sell. They choose not to.
            • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
              So, you're saying you open each and every individual item that comes into the store and test it?
              • by DogDude ( 805747 )
                So, you're saying you open each and every individual item that comes into the store and test it?

                Yes. That's what stores used to do. We still do it. That's probably why we're still in business (and doing well).
                • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
                  You're either lying, or not grasping what is being said. You're saying every single individual item is opened, tested, and then sealed back up before being stocked on the shelf for sale? Every single USB drive is pulled out of it's package and checked that it is in fact able to store the right amount of data. Every single TV is pulled out and tested that it works. On and on with every single possible product. Again, not by someone up the chain that you trust.. but by your store. I know from personal experie
                  • by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Wednesday July 18, 2018 @05:18PM (#56970674)
                    We buy from known suppliers. We know who we're buying from and what we're buying. Amazon is selling anything from anybody. Those two things are opposites.

                    I don't know what you're talking about, opening every product and testing it before selling it. I don't know what that has to do with this conversation.
                    • by DogDude ( 805747 )
                      And neither Amazon nor your employer have allocated the resources to catch the cheating before the product goes to the consumer.

                      That's not true. You don't have to check every single item, if you know who you're buying from. Amazon doesn't know who they're buying from, because they don't take the time to check their suppliers.
                    • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
                      Went on vacation, wasn't able to respond timely. I just wanted to clarify. My original point was that Amazon likely has their trusted suppliers for the products sold through them directly. They don't have that option when dealing with 3rd party sellers.

                      The only way for 3rd party sellers to be able to sell through Amazon, with the level of quality control you're talking about, would be for Amazon to require everything to ship through them. They would have to test each individual item, software included. Th
        • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Wednesday July 18, 2018 @02:44PM (#56969844) Journal

          Target doesn't allow third party sellers. You don't have these problems if you stick to stuff "sold by Amazon", but everything else is sort of a flea market. IMO, fraudulent sellers in general are a big problem. If the Chinese seller ships you anything you're better than average.

          Amazon needs to get on top of obvious patterns of fraud. If I can recognize that a seller is likely fraudulent, so can an algorithm. Some of the problems are more subtle and require a specialist to spot bad products (e.g., hard drives or camera lenses), but Amazon can hire those.
           

          • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

            If the Chinese seller ships you anything you're better than average.

            From my experience, the Chinese are very reliable when it comes to shipping you something.

            I bought maybe a hundred different items from Chinese sellers, on eBay, AliExpress and Amazon. Only once I didn't receive what I ordered, and it was lost in shipping (I had a tracking number) and I didn't file a dispute on time. The other rare times I didn't receive anything, I just contacted the seller and they send me another one for free or a refund, no question asked. 1 month delays are common though.

            Counterfeit go

            • by lgw ( 121541 )

              I've had multiple problems with Chinese sellers on Amazon not shipping anything. I'll get a delivery data 6-8 weeks out, but then nothing ever arrives.

              At thin point I won't by anything off Amazon unless it's either fulfilled by them, or a very large seller (too many ratings to be fake).

        • In fairness they have a directly curated product supply chain, as well as an incentive since they purchase the goods till its sold (or so I would expect).

          The only way that sort of checking would happen, is if Amazon were required to purchase the goods sold and then resell them, instead of just acting as a middleman/facilitator.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Amazon doesn't turn a blind eye to counterfeiting because they are cheap or lack quality control. They do it because it makes them money. End of story.

        The day counterfeiting risks losing Amazon money will be the day Amazon clamps down on counterfeits.

    • by torkus ( 1133985 )

      No doubt.

      FB ads are the same despite all the "cleanup" ... the other day i repeatedly got ads for a Raspberry Pi-based "SNES Classic alternative" which they bragged had every NES, SNES, etc. game. Basically your standard Pi emulator loadout of every (unlicensed) ROM for all the old systems.

      Not a bad deal TBH, but very much not legal...and oddly enough FB doesn't really even have a relevant reporting 'group' for that.

      In the end the platforms DGAF unless/until they're forced to act in the face of fines or la

  • Our customers trust that when they make a purchase through Amazon's store --either directly from Amazon or from its third-party sellers -- they will receive authentic products

    We HOPE to get authentic products; however, I generally go by the belief that if it looks too good to be true, it probably isn't. Amazon sells a lot of pirated and counterfeited goods. I've seen a lot of sellers on Amazon even include in their description of a product "if you see this product sold by a different seller it is counterfeit"- sellers know just like we do that there is a lot of "not genuine" products out there.

    • The problem is that since Amazon mixes same-ASIN stock in its warehouse, you can buy directly from Amazon.com and still end up getting a counterfeit from a 3rd-party seller. There is no separation whatsoever. This is why a lot of legitimate sellers of eclipse-viewing eyewear unfairly lost a lot of money last year.

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        Stuff "sold by Amazon" is not mixed with stuff from third party sellers, but that's different from "fulfilled by Amazon". And stuff from different third party sellers can theoretically get mixed, which is just frustrating for everyone. Most people aren't going to be looking for the difference between "Sold by" and "fulfilled by" either, especially for stuff that's "prime eligible". Sold on the main page and "prime eligible" really make it look like Amazon is selling it.

        • is not mixed with stuff from third party sellers, but that's different from "fulfilled by Amazon"

          Fulfilled by Amazon is still a third-party sale. Amazon is not selling the item. I was referring to FBA third-party sellers.

          • by lgw ( 121541 )

            They're working on keeping the 3rd-party sellers stuff straight, but it's kinda sad it wasn't that way from the beginning.

    • by DogDude ( 805747 )
      Why would you do business with a company where you "hope" to get authentic products? That seems pretty weird to me.
    • Our customers trust that when they make a purchase through Amazon's store --either directly from Amazon or from its third-party sellers -- they will receive authentic products

      We HOPE to get authentic products....

      Before applying a lot of heuristics that allow me to (I think) safely buy various items from a small set of categories, I don't share that hope, my default assumption is that what Amazon will ship me is counterfeit. If it's safety critical in a way I can't judge until I've for example suffered a c

  • Amazon has a poor track record in counterfeits for board games. Often Amazon will pool the games it sells along with any third parties into one inventory. When a customer buys one, even from Amazon itself, they get a game pulled from this inventory which has been a counterfeit from time to time. Amazon has a hard time tracking back where they got the fake from and customers can receive a poor quality reproduction thinking it is real. There are lengthy discussion topics over at www.boardgamegeek.com.
    • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Wednesday July 18, 2018 @12:44PM (#56969120)
      Well, yes. Amazon's end tail business model is pretty scummy, because it beats up on little companies without the resources to fight back. Most recently I've seen it happen to a T-shirt shop whose designs took off in Amazon marketplace: as soon as sales got above a certain threshold, Amazon duplicated the designs on their own Asia-sourced T-shirts and kicked the shop off of marketplace.

      Some attorney will probably get rich someday with an IP-based class action vs. Amazon on this kind of thing, but until they do, it's best to support your favorite goods and shops directly.
  • Jeff Bezos don't care.
    Jeff Bezos don't give a shit.
    Amazon got their cut of the sale. Amazon LOVES fraudulent products and sellers. They profit from them.

  • I know this from personal experience.

    I bought a projector lamp from them (being sold by Amazon itself not a third party) and it overheated and melted the projector mirror. I sent the projector off to Optoma who examined everything and said the bulb was a counterfeit. Presented with this evidence Amazon said they believed their supplier that the bulb was genuine and refused to admit any liability.

    They literally said the people that make the product were wrong. I've never bought from them since (5+ year
  • I'm kind of okay with counterfeits as long as it works as advertised, and the originating talent gets a cut (which I know isn't the case). Sincerely put, if you're going to counterfeit, cut the devs a check why don't ya? Slip em a fat nickel every time you get a download please. Devs, please consider open sourcing your game apps after like 5/10 years, or when the hardware they're designed for is no longer physically made or otherwise inaccessible. Games should have a timer to enter public domain. Sharing is

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