- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Amazon customer discovers his Intel Core i9-13900K is an i7-13700K in disguise::undefined
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I got a cordless vacuum like this. You could tell it was slightly used. Vacuum company said send it back to Amazon. I wrote in the booklet something along the lines of “this vacuum came to me used and broken via Amazon but sold as new” I then sent it back into amazon, got a refund. I probably won’t get any major purchases off Amazon anymore.
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I’m curious: why did you call amazon for a return?
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Playing devils advocate here but… I suspect what is happening here is a previous purchaser bought it (broke it?), returned it under a different reason (eg. I dint like it) and Amazon decided it is not worth the hassle of rechecking every return labeled as such.
Mind you this is no consolation for someone like you who has go to through this return process, but I cant believe Amazon is “winning” by keeping a defective product like this in rotation long enough for someone to “eat the cost”. Defective products hurt Amazon as well and I’m sure they’d rather take the hit if they could pin point which products are defective.
You could argue that they should bear the cost of validating every return, but clearly someone has crunched the numbers and the program is likely not cost effective.
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Here I agree with you. They either got a retun reason like “never used, changed my mind” or simply figured out that for a vast majority of purchases with return codes like this, it is safe to reshelf the object and ship it as new.
Whether the object is to be considered “new” or “like new / used” is probably a gray area. I’m not aware of where most other retailers draw the line on this one (walmart, target, costco, etc.). I’m sure the problem is even harder for online retailers, mostly because its much easier for people to lie on an online return form.
Regardless, my only gripe was people in this thread assuming a conspiracy where they intentionally rotate and peddle defective items hoping someone eats the cost.
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I can assue you they do not open and check returns, at least not with any regularity. I bought a 3d printer, used, off of amazon, via sold by/shipped by amazon, and the previous owner/returnee had simply dumped it in a box with some inadequate padding. Amazon never opened the box, and when it arrived on my doorstep it had broken glass, bent frame parts, missing screws, etc.
Some amazon returns require an explanation while others dont. My guess, they took the default or went through the drop down to one that didnt require any actual reasoning.
It is for this reason I have stopped buying some things like Hard Drives (almost always get sold as new but are refurbs or used), or computers. Even when labeled as used amazon allows certain things, like glittery dbrand skins to still quality as “pristine”. Also there is a new thing where they will come wiped, but had been registered in Azure/Intune/Apple MDM and thus will still be locked or reporting in.
Im an Amazon seller and this frustrates me to no end. A customer returns something and amazon puts it back into circulation. You cant do anything to stop it. I really wish there was a way i could have them send all returns back to me so i can do the proper thing. Amazon seller forums are filled with sellers wishing they could select to have returned inventory sent back.
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I had the same with Amazon and an Espresso machine. Got the box, it was beat up, missing Styrofoam, missing manual and damage to the appliance itself. But I also paid full price. Sent it back directly, got my money back and never ordering from them again.
I’ve had a similar experience with some monitor backlights. I was sent a “new” product that, when I opened it, I found it had been cut up (which breaks it), adhesive backing removed, parts removed from packaging, etc. Clearly used, returned, and sold back to me unchecked as new.
Almost as frustrating would be the third party sellers who intentionally send me something other than what I order, claim a mistake and that stock is out on the original order, and then try to convince me to keep it with a discount (price less than what I paid but equal to what I ended up getting), like some sort of shipping shell game. This has happened to me multiple times, from clothing to computer parts.
At some point there is going to have to be legal action against Amazon. It’s obviously an issue, and they’re clearly complicit and operate their distribution centers in a way that facilitates this.
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Most people would not expect to find such scams from a large retailer like Amazon.
I must not be most people because I only expect scams on a scamazon…heck I don’t even have a login for the shitty American Chinese reseller. Not worth my time.
Most people buy lots of junk off Amazon, and if there’s an issue Amazon just eats the loss.
But these scams abuse it two ways:
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But off a legit seller, return the fake. Next person gets the fake.
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“Third party seller” where they sell cheap (but solid) junk for months to build reputation, then flip to high price items that are flat out scams.
At some point Amazon switched from a “Walmart model” to more like a swap meet where you have no idea who you’re buying from. Not everyone noticed.
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Still waiting for my refund for what I suspect was a switcharoo return of a PC. Ordered a renewed Optiplex 7040 with an i7-6700 for a family member, but received someone’s old and dusty 3020 with an i3-4150 instead, and the refurb sticker for the right product had been slapped on it.
Figured it was a one-off scam, reordered another one right away, and thankfully the second was legit…but they’ve had the returned PC for 2 weeks now and still no refund. And course no way to follow up about it within the return status itself, so I’ll be wasting even more time trying to chase it down. Something has to change.
One phone call to your credit card, with all evidence ready.
While that would get the money back, credit chargebacks often result in being banned from stores. It’s safer to try working with the store first.
Yeah, gonna be real, I don’t give a fuck if I’m banned from a store that simultaneously doesn’t give me what I paid for and is slow on making it right.
It’s been 2 weeks. Chargeback and be done with them.
Yeah but if they’re not cooperating it’s worth it.
I bought a used cell phone from an ebay reseller who claimed a one-year warranty. Within that time, it broke, so I put in for a warranty claim. They said sure, here’s your shipping label, we’ll send you a refund or replacement. Time goes by, no refund or replacement, no reply to further messages. I contact ebay support and they tell me to do a chargeback. So I do. Bank wants some documentation, I provide everything, they put it through, I get the refund, and no account closure from ebay.
Ebay telling you to do it is different. Try a chargeback on steam or origin and you’ll potentially lose your entire game library.
Why are people so shitty?
capitalism
No one ever passed of defective machinery in Russia
Russia is capitalist
Ok buddy, “no one ever passed off defective machinery in the USSR”
They sure as hell did, all the time. Shit, Vladimir Komarov, a Russian cosmonaut in 1967, crashed full-force into the Earth after dying from re-entry heat, despite scientists saying THAT EXACT THING WOULD HAPPEN, because the capsule was little better than sheet metal bolted together and the parachutes literally did not work. The people who were supposed to check the work at the factory didn’t know better - they knew it had been constructed, and that was that. Brezhnev wanted it done, and wanted it done before the anniversary of the Revolution. So it flew, and a man died because it flew.
I agree, I was making fun of tankies who claim.everything from the west sucks
Socialists and Communists seems to be equally as shitty.
No don’t you understand? No one has ever had a bad experience under communism
Clearly it has nothing to do with human nature and greed, it’s all just capitalism apparently
the Amazon alternatives available in Southeast Asia are all like this. you really have to watch what you buy, and video record the box being opened when you get it. in some cases the seller is simply allowed by the platform to scam you and you can’t get a return.
Someone got ripped off on Amazon. Is that really newsworthy?
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