Amazon Can Be Held Liable For Third-Party Seller Products, Court Says (reuters.com) 136
A federal appeals court on Wednesday ruled that Amazon can be held liable for third-party seller products, exposing the online retailer to lawsuits from customers who buy defective products through its website. Reuters reports: Numerous other courts, including two federal appeals courts, have held that Amazon cannot be held liable as a seller of products from third-party vendors. The new ruling from the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia, which reversed a lower court decision, appeared to be the first to buck that trend. Liability for defective products is generally governed by state law, and Wednesday's decision is based on the laws of Pennsylvania, where the customer, Heather Oberdorf, lives.
Oberdorf sued Amazon in 2016 in a federal court in Pennsylvania, saying she was blinded in one eye when a retractable dog leash she bought through the company's website from a third-party vendor snapped and recoiled, hitting her in the face. The Furry Gang shipped the leash directly to Oberdorf from Nevada. Neither Oberdorf nor Amazon has been able to locate any representative of the Furry Gang, which has not been active on Amazon's site since 2016, according to court papers. In Wednesday's opinion, Circuit Judge Jane Richards Roth, writing for a 2-1 majority of a three-judge panel, said Amazon may be liable in part because its business model "enables third-party vendors to conceal themselves from the customer, leaving customers injured by defective products with no direct recourse to the third-party vendor."
Oberdorf sued Amazon in 2016 in a federal court in Pennsylvania, saying she was blinded in one eye when a retractable dog leash she bought through the company's website from a third-party vendor snapped and recoiled, hitting her in the face. The Furry Gang shipped the leash directly to Oberdorf from Nevada. Neither Oberdorf nor Amazon has been able to locate any representative of the Furry Gang, which has not been active on Amazon's site since 2016, according to court papers. In Wednesday's opinion, Circuit Judge Jane Richards Roth, writing for a 2-1 majority of a three-judge panel, said Amazon may be liable in part because its business model "enables third-party vendors to conceal themselves from the customer, leaving customers injured by defective products with no direct recourse to the third-party vendor."
Re:Awful Court (Score:5, Insightful)
Disagree. You provide a marketplace, you're liable for what happens in that marketplace. That you decided to be hands-off and ignore problems until you couldn't any longer does not absolve you for what goes on under your roof. And let's face it, this isn't an issue that they're unaware of, they just don't want to deal with it because it's inconvenient and will cost them money if they're forced to oversee 3rd-party sales.
By your specious logic, Ebay has no responsibility to resolve disputes, etc. Why should Amazon be different? They're not, other than the market model they use.
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By your specious logic, Ebay has no responsibility to resolve disputes, etc. Why should Amazon be different? They're not, other than the market model they use.
This case isn't about resolving disputes, it's about Amazon being held responsible for a defective product they didn't sell.
Re: Awful Court (Score:1)
No it's about concealing the seller from liability, therefore they have accepted liability.
Re:Awful Court (Score:5, Interesting)
It's not about profiting from the sale (Score:2)
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Sure that's not that difficult for you to grasp?
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"Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
Transsartorial?
Re:Awful Court (Score:5, Insightful)
They did sell it and they hid the 'manufacturer' from the customer. If they hadn't hidden those details, Amazon wouldn't have been directly liable.
This is exactly the same thing which happens with retail stores. You sue the store and the store re-sues the original company or passes the lawsuit onto them. Amazon wasn't able to pass the lawsuit on so they're stuck with it. If this wasn't the case, every retail store would create mini-companies for each item they sold then close the companies after the sales. Suddenly there's no one to sue, no one to be held liable for any fraud, and no one to honor warranties. Physical sales are protected from things like that so stuff sold online should be handled the same.
Just like if a contractor damages your roof. You sue the contractor, not the contractor's hired hands. The 3rd party sellers on Amazon are part of Amazon. You didn't hire them to be there, Amazon did. And yes, Amazon hired them. There's an approval process to be able to sell stuff on Amazon.
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Going old school here a bit but...
Wouldn't this be like a newspaper posting a classified ad (do they still even do this?) and then being held responsible for the transaction if something goes wrong? After all the newspaper was the " intermediary the [sic] enabled the transaction to happen, and they. profited from it"
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If all Amazon did was provide a market place (Score:2)
The problem with Amazon is that they are actively trying to make it seem like you're buying from them when you're not. Sometimes this is overt, like when you buy something from Amazon and it gets "fulfilled" by some rando (don't buy batteries on Amazon unless you want junk) sometimes not so overt like when they make the logos that tell you you're buying from Amazon itself smaller.
Amazon wan
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When Amazon starts to mix regular and counterfeit goods in the same bins, then they become liable if the buyer is expecting a name-brand product, but turns out to be a defective knock-off. That would DEFINITELY be Amazon's fault.
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By your specious logic, Ebay has no responsibility to resolve disputes, etc.
Maybe you should read the user agreement [ebay.com]:
2. About eBay
eBay is a marketplace that allows users to offer, sell and buy just about anything in a variety of pricing formats and locations. The actual contract for sale is directly between the seller and buyer. eBay is not a traditional auctioneer.
Any guidance we provide as part of our Services, such as pricing, shipping, listing, and sourcing is solely informational and you may decide to follow it or not. Also, while we may help facilitate the resolution of disputes through various programs, eBay has no control over and does not guarantee: the existence, quality, safety or legality of items advertised; the truth or accuracy of users' content or listings; the ability of sellers to sell items; the ability of buyers to pay for items; or that a buyer or seller will actually complete a transaction or return an item.
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If I own a shopping centre and one of my tenants sells something they shouldn't (spoiled or inedible food products, products that are unsafe, products that have been recalled, products that have been banned, things that are outright illegal, whatever) I am not liable for what that retailer has sold (since its impossible for me to police every item sold by every retailer in my centre.
Why should Amazon be required to police whether an item someone is selling through their site (especially one that is shipped
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There is also no reasonable way for Amazon to have knowledge of the millions of products sold on their site.
Thats why Amazons contract with the 3rd parties would put those 3rd parties on the hook for any judgments against Amazon that the 3rd parties are responsible for.
The online world seems to have failed to learn from the offline world, be it Amazon or Google (Google hasnt yet learned how advertising is sold offline)
"I bought it on amazon" (Score:2)
Sellers are liable in many places for stuff like warranty, guarantees etc etc. They provide buyer protection so how are they not liable for selling the products? they mix an match them on their site how is the consumer supposed to know when it's a product that amazon is liable for?
Also, on subject of illegal content, if I were to open a marketplace called pIraAte Roms MachInes and people came on there and sold counterfeit game cartridges you can be sure as f an usa court would find me liable for the trade t
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There is also no reasonable way for Amazon to have knowledge of the millions of products sold on their site.
It's possible for Amazon to get the contact info of everyone who sells through their site. If they can't do that, they need to face the court.
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I think this is probably good (Score:5, Interesting)
Amazon has for too long profited from many counterfeit goods sold there, or almost even worse truly questionable quality things like chargers that actually can damage devices.
If this makes Amazon takes a much more careful look at sellers I think it can only be for the good, as an economic incentive to do due diligence, in a way they obviously have not been willing to do to date.
It may make for some more expensive products but that is probably marginal, compared to more people feeling like they can order electronics from Amazon and not get (literally) burned.
Re:I think this is probably good (Score:5, Insightful)
Why moderate this down?
Amazon has for too long profited from many counterfeit goods sold there, or almost even worse truly questionable quality things like chargers that actually can damage devices.
If this makes Amazon takes a much more careful look at sellers I think it can only be for the good, as an economic incentive to do due diligence, in a way they obviously have not been willing to do to date.
It may make for some more expensive products but that is probably marginal, compared to more people feeling like they can order electronics from Amazon and not get (literally) burned.
If Amazon wants to become another junk dealer on the internet then they need to make that clear up front. Their business model is based on trust and if they fail to maintain this trust then they can start to find customers drifting away.
I used to really like Amazon, I could trust them to sell quality items. I found myself taking an ever increasing care on where my items come from on Amazon. It got to a point that I'm buying fewer items from them. I prefer instead to go to websites for brick and mortar stores in my area because if something goes wrong then I can go to a store and grab someone's collar if I must. Amazon has been getting increasingly fast and convenient but it's real hard to compete with a local store that I can place my order online with a local store, they hold the item until I get there, and then while I'm there I can pick up whatever it was I forgot to order in the first place. I might have to visit a half dozen websites to make all my purchases but once I find everything I need I can make a quick trip around town to pick up everything and I saved hours in shopping and travel and I didn't have to wait for even overnight shipping. If there wasn't something in stock that day then I can still get it from those same trusted locations, have them hold it at the store (which is always free) or shipped to my home (sometimes free, sometimes a small fee). I'm likely paying more but I don't make enough money to buy cheap shit twice.
Amazon might be huge right now but we've seen the mighty fall before. If they can't maintain quality of products they offer, and stand up for their customers, then I'll continue to drift away from them.
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Amazon only has two viable options. The first option is the one they currently do. Remove fraudulent 3rd party sellers when they get reported. Grain of salt and all, given that people will lie and cheat. So, they might come back under a different name. I don't know how
Re:I think this is probably good (Score:5, Insightful)
Sounds like a cost of doing business problem that all of the b&m stores have already handled. There are entire professions built around selection and supply chain management of products for sale in stores. Amazon shouldn't get special consideration for being an online marketplace. Right now, they're a bazaar masquerading as a store and that needs better separation.
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Third parties don't sell it. When my CC is billed, it is billed by AMAZON.
So you're saying the company billing my CC is the company that sold me the product? So, everything I buy through Paypal is sold to me by Paypal?
Amazon does not promote the fact that many sales are handled by third parties.
I see tons of crap every time I go to Amazon about which store is selling the item, what store is selling at what price, and the like. They're not hiding it. When looking at which sellers are available for the items, it also shows the seller rating. Clearly, you must not use Amazon.
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To their credit, Amazon refunded it immediately and I sent the drive back but they clearly have counterfeit goods in their marketplace
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This is perhaps the biggest issue in my book is that many things are not clear. I'd venture to say that Amazon obscures things on purpose.
I rarely buy anything from Amazon that isn't 'ships and fulfilled' by Amazon. If I do, it better be 5 stars with no complaints.
For one thing, if you search for an item, there isn't an 'obvious' way to restrict it to ships and fulfilled by Amazon. You have to click on item and look at the details.
Then if you do buy items from a 3rd party, Amazon makes it as obscure as poss
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It was a manner of speech :)
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Amazon's marketplace is a volume based business. Their volume benefits from permitting fraudulent, defective, and especially counterfeit products that form such a large percentage of different online vendors, including Amazon, Ebay, and Craigslist. Accepting responsibility for authenticating vendors, and ensuring that they are traceable by law enforcement, by the manufactures of non-counterfeited, or by abused clients would cost resources, cost time, leave them at risk for failing to _use_ that information
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More importantly, it will be more difficult to sell stuff you make in your garage in small numbers. I could easily see Amazon starting t
lawyer: an unsurprisin evolution of the law (Score:2)
I am a lawyer, but this is not legal advise. If you want legal advice, pay my retainer!
In short, this is a consistent and unsurprising evolution of the law. Also note that this is for product liability, not warranty/quality.
Over the 20th century, product liability law changed. Today, every merchant in the distribution chain, from manufacturer through each wholesaler down t o the final merchant, is liable if someone is injured *by a defect* in the product, while the shipping companies, credit car
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Amazon has for too long profited from many counterfeit goods
Heh..yep. Had no idea how bad it was until I started looking for a 512G microSD card.
Just gotta wonder who buys these things... Hmmm...most of these things cost a hundred bucks, but here's one that's only twenty. Clearly the $20.00 one is the better value for money!
Telephone vs. television (Score:1)
What is Amazon? Is it more like a telephone, or more like a television? I say more like a television. Why is this important? Because a telephone company doesn't know who says what to whom. They might know what phone number made a call to another phone number, when, and where, but that's all they need to know to collect their fees. A television company carrying an advertisement, a program, or news item, has to know where this data came from before they put it on the air. As such they choose what they
Why did this even need a court? (Score:2)
This seems perfectly reasonable. If Amazon wants to profiteer off the sales from third parties then they damn well should be liable as well for the damages caused by those profits. This is exactly the same deal Piratebay got: making available links to pirated content is one thing, but when you profiteer off ads by making these links available you enter a new level of responsibility.
Amazon is more than happy to sell third party products. They make a lot of money doing it. That comes with a new level of respo
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Defective goods (Score:5, Interesting)
Defective goods are one issue. Counterfeit goods, however, are the bigger problem in my opinion.
There are some things I simply will not buy online, including from Amazon, due to the potential of getting a counterfeit instead of the real deal.
( Mostly higher end camera gear, lenses and accessories )
This is important to me because I don't want a cheap knockoff battery made in some guys garage inside a $6k camera body. :|
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cheap flash memory (Score:2)
So if I buy a $5 128GB flash memory from Amazon with bad reviews that claim it is really only 4GB, Amazon is responsible?
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Yes.
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If they cannot or will not connect you with the real vendor to file suit, yes. Amazon or other online vendors accepted money to establish communications between the customer and the vendor. To actively or passively shield the vendor from followup is negligent.
Re:cheap flash memory (Score:4, Informative)
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Defective? (Score:2)
"enables third-party vendors to conceal themselves from the customer, leaving customers injured by defective products with no direct recourse to the third-party vendor."
But isn't this true of ANY business? If I buy item X from company Y, and later I want to sue them but can no longer find them... who do I sue? Why does Amazon have to hunt them down? If they have provided all contact/personal info about the vendor, what else should they be expected to do?
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But isn't this true of ANY business? If I buy item X from company Y, and later I want to sue them but can no longer find them... who do I sue?
Amazon conceals them while they're still actively listing. You can't get real contact info for sellers on Amazon unless they go out of their way to include it in the listing.
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Neither Oberdorf nor Amazon has been able to locate any representative of the Furry Gang, which has not been active on Amazon's site since 2016, according to court papers.
Amazon has been trying to find/contact them, but is unable to.
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Amazon has been trying to find/contact them, but is unable to.
True, and that would be a decent defense, except that what I said is also true: You can't reach them even when they're still active sellers. That's why I suspect Amazon may be in trouble on this one. I expect them to settle rather than allow a precedent to be set.
Here's the actual opinion (Score:5, Insightful)
Link here [justia.com]. Most central to the outcome is this four-factor test to determine whether Pennsylvania strict product liability law should apply to Amazon for this transaction:
(1) Whether the actor is the “only member of the marketing chain available to the injured plaintiff for redress”;
(2) Whether “imposition of strict liability upon the [actor] serves as an incentive to safety”;
(3) Whether the actor is “in a better position than the consumer to prevent the circulation of defective products”; and
(4) Whether “[t]he [actor]can distribute the cost of compensating for injuries resulting from defects by charging for it in his business, i.e., by adjustment of the rental terms.”
Somewhat unsurprisingly, they found against Amazon on all four factors.
welcome to higher fees and more expensive stuff (Score:2)
I have a small amount of sales on Amazon (mostly old stuff and things laying around). However I was able to follow their changes to the program over the years.
Basically they want to have maximum profits in each step.
For example,
You can use Amazon for drop shipping, while you can also drop ship to Amazon customers
You can use Amazon warehouses to sell, or do "seller fulfilled prime" where you get a larger cut
You can list a new product on Amazon, but you can also undercut them on their own listings
They do all
walmart is next (Score:2)
guess the court ruling will apply to all retailers like walmart - let the lawsuits begin!
Re:walmart is next (Score:4, Informative)
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Intermingling (Score:2)
Its about responsibility (Score:3)
If Amazon cant provide verifiable and accurate legal contact information, on sellers using their marketplace, for service of process in legal claims then they should be liable instead. Anyone selling on Amazon should have to provide such information.
In my mind thats basic common sense, if they collect the information and can provide it in legal suits they shouldn't be liable, but if they don't or can't provide contact info they should be liable as a result.
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Amazon should just be liable, full stop. None of this "we are just a marketplace" crap. They mix their own and the 3rd party stuff together, often they deliver 3rd party goods from their own warehouse. Making them liable would be an incentive to actually vet the sellers and the products.
Becareful what you wish for (Score:2)
Generally have an extremely low opinion of Amazon.
The marketplace feedback system is obviously intentionally broken. Virtually impossible to view a sellers negative feedback. Have to click next page on a list of 5 items at a time with no useful filtering.
It STILL takes seconds to locate obviously fraudulent items for sale on Amazon. /w FREE SHIPPING. What a steal.
Search "1tb usb flash" only $19.95
Go into the seller feedback of the jokers selling this garbage and you will find shit like this:
"This was a F
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The marketplace feedback system is obviously intentionally broken. Virtually impossible to view a sellers negative feedback. Have to click next page on a list of 5 items at a time with no useful filtering.
If one uses the website, one can click on the "1 star" hyperlink and see all the one star reviews.
It STILL takes seconds to locate obviously fraudulent items for sale on Amazon. Search "1tb usb flash" only $19.95 /w FREE SHIPPING. What a steal.
Go into the seller feedback of the jokers selling this garbage and you will find shit like this:
"This was a FAKE product as many others have posted. Files went missing, corrupted. The actual capacity of this device is FAR below what was advertised and is..."
You mean something that sounds too good to be true is? Imagine that.....
Only impossible to actually read that text because strike thru is enabled with the following: "Message from Amazon: This item was fulfilled by Amazon, and we take responsibility for this fulfillment experience."
This sounds like someone gave a low rating and complained about shipping and Amazon said "Our bad". That doesn't sound like a problem with the product
By the way this is not just one that was cherry picked where someone at Amazon just fucked up... it's **ALL** of the negative feedbacks like this at least out of the sellers I've looked into.
You said it is impossible to see the negative feedback and you say you have looked at all the negative feedback on a specific seller.. Which is it? Did you suddenly discover the ability to vi
Agents in Common law (Score:3)
This is to be expected: It has long been recognised that those acting as an agent are equally liable in common law. Amazon and similar can try to dress it up all they like but common law trumps contract law.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Silk Road vs. Amazon (Score:2)
The multiple incarnations of the online Silk Road were found complicit in the misdeeds of their linked merchants.
Therefore Amazon can and must be.
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Amazon acted with, possibly deliberate, indifference to the possibility of criminal activity buy it's sellers to it's profit.
These are very different things.
Corpspeak (Score:2)
"The most impactful way we can improve the experience of delivering music to Spotify for as many artists and labels as possible is to lean into the great work our distribution partners are already doing to serve the artist community,"
What a marvelous example of corpspeak.
Translated it means: "We're gonna limit your ability to use our service. Why? Because FUCK YOU, that's why. And of course money, we want all the money."
DOH - I has the Dumb (Score:2)
Posted this to the wrong page, because I be stoopid.
This is why I don't buy Chinese junk (Score:2)
When some stupid product kills me, my heirs won't be able to find the bastards and sue them.
Let's be honest here, American products are sometimes very low quality. But I'll gladly pay double if it means someone can be held liable for negligence in safety and defects in manufacture.
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LOL. Quality made Chinese goods? I think you mean Taiwanese made. They're the only ones in China who bother with Q.C. at their tool forges.
I have some quality American made hand tools and some shop tools. But there are no good cordless tools made in the US. There are some Mexico made power tools now, they're pro-sumer and while they have good features they eventually break in a way that can't be repaired.
I doubt American goods are more likely to kill you than Chinese goods, with American automobiles being t
FINALLY (Score:1)
eBay should be worried (Score:1)
If Amazon is now responsible for other sellers, eBay has a nightmare on their hands.
Looking at Walmart (Score:2)