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The Courts Communications The Internet

eBay Files Lawsuit Against Amazon Over 'Seller Recruitment' (bbc.com) 38

An anonymous reader quotes a report from BBC: EBay has filed a lawsuit against Amazon, accusing the U.S. retail giant of using illegal tactics to recruit sellers. It says Amazon representatives abused eBay's internal email system to contact sellers -- a violation of the marketplace's policies. Amazon declined to comment on the case, which follows a letter from eBay demanding an end to the activity. It had previously said that it was investigating the claims. In the lawsuit filed in Santa Clara County, California, eBay says Amazon representatives created eBay accounts to solicit sellers, often sending messages within minutes of setting up their profiles. The activity dates back to at least 2015 and involved dozens of Amazon representatives, who each sent hundreds of emails, it says. EBay was alerted to the issue a few weeks ago by a seller and asked Amazon to stop.
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eBay Files Lawsuit Against Amazon Over 'Seller Recruitment'

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  • Whatever.... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 18, 2018 @06:11PM (#57500502)

    As a customer, I prefer Amazon over eBay. Better protections and faster.

    As an honest seller, I prefer Amazon over eBay. The commission is a little less, but the seller security is better.

    I didn't need any recruitment email for that. I used everyone I could and the FREE MARKET decided for me.

    • Sure, but that isn't what this lawsuit is about. It sounds like eBay is accusing Amazon of using eBay resources to lure sellers away from eBay. Amazon is alleged to have created eBay accounts to do this, which is a violation of eBay's policies. If Amazon had setup a big board on 101 encouraging sellers to move from eBay, that might be okay - but eBay may have a case here.
      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        So what though. Please stop, no, disconnect. New account, please stop, no, disconnect. Just the reality of business, try suing Amazon, they can counter sue because you are acting in a prejudicial manner against the individuals you kick off.

    • I'll second the "Whatever.."

      I signed up on eBay in 1997, had occasionally bought and sold many times over the years and accumulated a long history with positive feedback and reliable payment.

      Tried to log in again a few months ago to buy sell a few things and discovered they had deleted my account with no warning. No explanation from customer support, who refused to help and repeatedly told me that it was "impossible" to recover my account. Can't imagine that I'm the only one.

      Done and moved on.

    • Ebay can be better than Amazon. With Amazon, you have to hold off on placing an order until you reach $25 worth of items in your cart to get free shipping. Ebay frequently has the same $5-10 items with free shipping and no minimum order. From what I've read, Ebay also has buyer protection that sellers hate, since they always side with the buyer.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The free market is only free until a monopoly takes over and pretty soon EVERYTHING you RENT is owned by the company store. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Company_store Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it.

  • With the current state of their 'marketplace', well now I view them in the same way as Ebay. Mostly a junk shop. Amazon used to be my first stop, now it's the last resort. Congratulations!
  • by Anonymous Coward

    a violation of the marketplace's policies.

    Once again, a company's "policies" carry zero legal weight. All they can do is deny those individuals use of Ebay's services. There is no legal requirement to follow "policy", any more than Amazon has to follow my policy of selling me everything at a 99% discount.

  • This seems to me like a shouting match between streetwalkers, with each one screaming that the other is a "Ho".

  • Really Ebay should have just amended their TOS and then memory holed emails from Amazon's accounts.

  • Your T&Cs are not law. Please do not abuse the word "illegal" like this.
    • The TNCs aren't law, but violating them and continually accessing the servers is "computer fraud and abuse" and illegal. Just like if you keep sending random usernames and passwords. The law doesn't distinguish those two types of acts... and if you think about it, it's hard to draw that line.

      • by jrumney ( 197329 )

        The TNCs aren't law, but violating them and continually accessing the servers is "computer fraud and abuse" and illegal.

        This is a dubious legal argument which is hinted at in an earlier article linked by the article: "might fall foul of Californian laws governing reasonable access to computer systems". This is especially dubious where the alleged fraud and abuse is using a feature of the website for sending messages to the seller to ... send messages to the seller.

  • by slashmydots ( 2189826 ) on Thursday October 18, 2018 @10:42PM (#57501602)
    I had someone from amazon buy something from my ebay store specifically to get my phone number from my paypal account then he called me on the phone to try to recruit me to sell on Amazon. Talk about creepy and going way too far. Amazon is the worst monopoly abuser, especially with their recent Prime nonsense, in the history of the world.
  • I used to sell every now and again ( not a power seller ) on ebay but their fees were just too much! Ebay is probably upset that the emails actually worked and got people to sell in amazon too or move there for good.
    • Of course they're upset because the emails worked! And that's completely fair. If you go into McDonald's with applications to work at Burger King and a higher wage, McDonald's would tell you to leave. And when you came back, they could get you arrested for trespassing. Just stand off their fucking property. And don't use Ebay's internal mail system to get their sellers. Use literally any other method to reach out.

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