Amazon Allowing Third Party Sellers To Violate Shoppers Privacy

Amazon Allowing Third Party Sellers To Violate Shoppers Privacy

Via In Question: Some sellers on Amazon are hunting down customers who leave bad reviews, hounding them to delete said reviews or to replace them with positive ones. The trend is becoming so popular that some companies are offering “email extraction” and “reviewer lookup” services so sellers can hunt down unsatisfied customers. Attorney Madeline Pendley joins Manila Chan to discuss more.

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*This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos.

Amazon shoppers grew increasingly wary of the quality control of products that make it to their doorstep after numerous allegations of privacy breaches from online buyers. A number of shoppers are angry that Amazon sellers have been able to reach out to online shoppers directly circumventing the dispute process set in place by Amazon, where if and when consumers were dissatisfied with an item, they were free to leave a negative review on that product. They could remain anonymous to the seller during this process. So what's happening with the privacy of purchase? So here to discuss all of that is Madeline Pendley. She's an attorney at Levin Papantonio and Rafferty. Madeline, thanks for joining us. First, a number of consumer rights issues here, I think. First, what about consumer privacy? Why have sellers been able to zero in on some customers? I mean, isn't Amazon supposed to be protecting their identity?
A hundred percent, Amazon is absolutely supposed to be protecting the customer's information and two main things are happening here. So one, Amazon just isn't doing enough on the front end to protect consumer information. It claims that it's, you know, actively looking for and trying to stop these practices, according to Amazon, it stopped, you know, millions of fake customer reviews, but that being said, there are still numerous cases, numerous reports where Amazon employees were actually accused of accepting bribes in exchange for giving away information to third-party sellers. So despite, you know, best efforts, Amazon still has a long way to go to ensure that it's keeping customer information confidential.
Wow.
The other issue is that some of these third-party sellers are actually using email extraction services that can provide them with the customer's email. So these sellers only ever have the customer's name and their address and that's it and it's intentional. But they're circumventing the process and actually paying for the customer's email. It's a huge problem.
They are being sneaky then and going around the process and getting, I'm sure you shop at Amazon, I shop at Amazon, getting, stealing our information, essentially.
Right.
So, you know, many of these products over the years, we've seen, you know, feature glowing reviews. We know now that some of them are paid reviews, some have been persuaded, let's say to change their original negative reviews. What's this do to consumer confidence, especially in the online space where you can't be there to physically touch the item, to judge its quality for yourself?
It's absolutely detrimental to consumer confidence. You know, assuming consumers know that it's happening. These Amazon sellers, like you said, it's, it's more than just paying people to take down a review here and there, it's coercion. I mean, it's walking right up to fraud. You know, people don't know that these reviews are not genuine. They may not be honest and they may not be indicative of the consumer's actual experience. And as you mentioned, so many people rely on product reviews when buying things specifically from Amazon, we want to rely on fellow consumers rather than company sponsored advertising. We find it more reliable, less biased and so this practice is very dangerous and it's completely inappropriate. It's one thing for the company to reach out and address an issue that can be fixed, like say customer service. You know, I gave you three stars because it took too long to get to me, sure. Reach out and try to fix that.

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