Sketchy sellers are bribing and hassling Amazon customers via email

Amazon enjoyed huge profits during the pandemic, as consumers scrambled to buy essentials and items to keep busy while staying home. The online retail juggernaut saw more orders and members as people jumped aboard the Prime bandwagon.

Even now, as supplies and other products are readily available again, Amazon is expanding its business, seeking thousands of workers to help keep the orders moving. Tap or click here for more on Amazon’s call to potential employees.

Over the past couple of months, Amazon has cracked down and removed sellers that pay customers for positive reviews. Now sellers are apparently going after people who leave negative reviews and attempting to change their minds.

Fake feedback

Reviews are a great way to make buying decisions on Amazon, but you can’t always trust them. In 2020 alone, Amazon removed 200 million suspected fake reviews before customers saw them.

Fake reviews come in different flavors. Sometimes reviewers have a deal with sellers in which they leave positive feedback in exchange for a refund on the product they are reviewing, which they then get to keep.

Some sellers go fishing for good reviews by leaving gift cards in their packages amounting to the same cost of the item purchased. Sellers use social media and other third parties to attract people to leave them positive reviews. Tap or click here for information on some products that were removed by Amazon as a result of these crooked practices.

Tracking you down

The Wall Street Journal published a report about sellers tracking down customers who left negative reviews and requesting that they revise or delete the review in exchange for gift cards or refunds.

Ben Hendin of Oklahoma told the Journal that he was contacted by a seller outside of Amazon four times after leaving a negative review on a $17 finger splint. The seller kept bumping up the amount he was willing to pay the customer to remove the review, all the way up to $40.

When Ben asked how his contact information was found, the seller said his boss found it through a “social software search for names.”

Sellers aren’t supposed to reach out to Amazon customers outside of the platform, which hides contact information. This is a violation of the terms they agree on to use Amazon to sell their wares.

Continue reading

170 crypto scam apps spotted stealing money - See the list

The pandemic has changed many aspects of our daily lives. Many people continue working or going to school from home and online retail is still booming.

While some picked up hobbies and learned new languages, others got into investing. Cryptocurrency was an attractive option during the pandemic, as fears of government restrictions on traditional stock trading arose. Social media threw its hat in the ring, driving more people towards crypto. Tap or click here for Kim’s crash course on digital currency.

Continue reading

How fraudulent online retailers are robbing us blind

00:00
–:–

Open/download audio

Ready for a new generation of online retail fraud? Listen to this one-minute podcast to protect yourself from trending scams.

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices