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Businesses The Almighty Buck

Amazon Jacked Up Prime Day Prices, Misleading Consumers, Says Vendor (foxbusiness.com) 233

An anonymous reader shares a report: A Charlotte-based startup says e-commerce king Amazon jacked up their suggested retail price during the company's annual discount event -- Prime Day -- to deceive consumers into thinking that they were getting a deal, when in reality, they weren't. Jason Jacobs, founder of Remodeez, a small company that specializes in non-toxic foot deodorizers and other odor stoppers, says he had an agreement with Amazon since 2015 on a suggested retail price of $9.99 for his products and was shocked after the tech giant almost doubled that on Prime Day to make it look like people were getting a discount, when they were actually paying full price. "They showed the product at $15.42 and then exed it out to put '$9.99 for Amazon Prime Day.' And on the final day, the price was like $18.44. So, we put a support ticket in right away and I rallied some friends through social media to go to their complaint board and complain," Jacobs tells FOX Business.
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Amazon Jacked Up Prime Day Prices, Misleading Consumers, Says Vendor

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  • And So It Begins (Score:5, Interesting)

    by cunina ( 986893 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @09:44AM (#54874309)
    Amazon ran their retail business at a loss for years in order to gain market dominance. We always knew the day would come when they'd use their immense power to start extracting higher profits out of their customer base. That day has arrived. And, don't think for one minute that they won't do the same with AWS if they ever achieve the same level of dominance. (Giving us all a rare reason to root for Microsoft.)
    • by Futurepower(R) ( 558542 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @10:16AM (#54874641) Homepage
      There are many, many other defects in Amazon management. Every web page, for example, tries to sell you something else before giving full information about a product.

      Playing games with prices is EXTREMELY self-destructive. People buy much more from companies they know they can trust. When a company can't be trusted, customers must spend time thinking carefully about every item before buying.

      Amazon abuses employees, according to news reports:

      Inside Amazon: Wrestling Big Ideas in a Bruising Workplace [nytimes.com] (Aug. 15, 2015)

      Worse than Wal-Mart: Amazon's sick brutality and secret history of ruthlessly intimidating workers [salon.com] (Feb. 23, 2014)

      Amazon Under Fire Over Alleged Worker Abuse in Germany [bloomberg.com] (February 19, 2013)

      Jeff Bezos, the CEO of Amazon, owns a spaceflight company, Blue Origin [wikipedia.org]. Would you fly into space with a company whose owner makes abusive web pages?
    • Re:And So It Begins (Score:5, Informative)

      by supremebob ( 574732 ) <themejunky AT geocities DOT com> on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @10:48AM (#54874935) Journal

      Yeah, this basically means that they're now working like every other retail business in existence.

      When I worked at a grocery store as a teenager, I must have marked up items hundreds of times only to "discount" some of them 10 to 25% off a week later. Basically, the item was only a few cents less than the old retail price, which then went back to the new marked up price a week later.

      The number of items that went up in price every week vs the number of items that went down every week was like 10 to 1. Basically, they just used the sales to generate price confusion so you were less likely to notice that your total grocery bill was creeping up about 6% every year.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • "They're actually worse. In a traditional brick and mortar store, every customer sees the same price on the shelf. But e-Commerce stores like Amazon are increasingly turning to customer analytics to fine tune pricing on a per customer basis."

          In my country, many "brick-and-mortar" shops (stores) have moved from paper price labels to smart price labels (yay, IoT), and the vendors selling the solutions have been talking up the ability to do the same thing (with WiFi hotspots or bluetooth beqcons tracking shopp

      • Re:And So It Begins (Score:4, Informative)

        by Mashiki ( 184564 ) <mashiki@gmail.cBALDWINom minus author> on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @11:19AM (#54875201) Homepage

        Yeah, this basically means that they're now working like every other retail business in existence.

        Well not really. It means that they're working like every shady retail business in existence. In most countries this is illegal to do. It doesn't matter if it's pennies or thousands of dollars difference. Hiking the price before a sale, at least here in Canada falls afoul of federal consumer protection laws [competitionbureau.gc.ca] and provincial consumer protection laws in every province and territory. If you live in Canada, you should file a complaint. You can do so at this link here. [competitionbureau.gc.ca] Then click the "complaint form" section or you can call this number: 1-800-348-5358 and file a complaint directly.

        The government does investigate this stuff, they do levy fines over it. One of the big problems is, some people don't notice it or believe it's simply the market forces at work. A few years ago, there was an entire chain of gas stations in Quebec for exactly this. And there's currently an investigation into one of the big food chains here in Canada over sale manipulation.

        • Re:And So It Begins (Score:4, Interesting)

          by danbert8 ( 1024253 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @11:26AM (#54875245)

          Even if it's illegal, it's still widespread. I've literally gone back to a Best Buy with receipt in hand for an item bought NOT on sale trying to exchange it for the same item ON SALE for $5 more than it was the previous day with the "regular price" $15 above what my non sale price was the previous day. I had to fight with a manager to let them do the exchange without me paying an additional $5 sale price.

  • by lq_x_pl ( 822011 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @09:46AM (#54874325)
    Company that sells stuff engages in shady behavior to maximize profits.
  • See Kohl's and just about any other brick and mortar retailer too...

    Diligence folks...

  • by cahuenga ( 3493791 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @09:47AM (#54874337)
    Amazon is no longer reliably cheaper than some brick and mortar options. I have run into this trend more and more in the last couple years.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Amazon has the stock advantage.

      That oddball movie? They have it
      A Nintendo Switch? They have it
      Some obscure part? They have it

      HMV just shuttered its stores across Canada 20 years ago they were a good place to shop for music and movies, they maintained a comprehensive stock as of last year they had walls (WALLS) of new release only material plus a mountain of other crap that wasn't music or movies.

      The future is massive efficiently managed warehouses tied to a delivery infrastructure with a catalogue dump onli

      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        "The future is massive efficiently managed warehouses tied to a delivery infrastructure with a catalogue dump online"

        I see someone has already failed to observe and learn from history. We had this back in the day - it's called the Sears & Roebuck catalog.

        Wanna know why it died? Brick and Mortar stores.

        Nothing beats the convenience of being able to have the item in your hands THEN AND THERE, NO WAITING.

        This is why I rarely shop online.

        • by SQLGuru ( 980662 )

          Amazon has tackled that, too. I live in a warehouse city, so there are many items I can get the same day.......so I don't have to leave the house and I can have it just as fast as if I got dressed, drove to the store, hoped they had it, bought it, and returned home.

          • Amazon has tackled that, too. I live in a warehouse city, so there are many items I can get the same day.......so I don't have to leave the house and I can have it just as fast as if I got dressed, drove to the store, hoped they had it, bought it, and returned home.

            I agree that that is cool.

            I also live in a city that has an Amazon warehouse in a nearby town. It was Thanksgiving day, and i found that my digital meat thermometer had decided to die.

            Got on Amazon, and a couple of HOURS later, there was a knock at the door... Same day delivery (via a Courier service), and on a HOLIDAY!

            There's a lot not to like about Amazon; but delivery is rarely one of them...

        • "The future is massive efficiently managed warehouses tied to a delivery infrastructure with a catalogue dump online"

          I see someone has already failed to observe and learn from history. We had this back in the day - it's called the Sears & Roebuck catalog.

          Wanna know why it died? Brick and Mortar stores.

          Nothing beats the convenience of being able to have the item in your hands THEN AND THERE, NO WAITING.

          This is why I rarely shop online.

          You didn't just seriously compare a periodical paper catalog, with 4-6w shipping/return time with a service that provides same day delivery of well more than what was ever in an S&R mail order catalog, did you?

          • He did - granted, back in the day(TM, pat. pending), mail-order was literally the only way many folks could even get anything, let alone have that much variety to choose from. Sure, you could have the local general store do it for you, but you paid the markup, and odds were good that the store just used the same catalog to order the stuff.

            BUT... timelines aside, it's the same mechanism, minus the Internet/computer bit, and with a slightly longer timeline.

            Now pricing/monopoly-wise, a better analogy would be

        • Catalog sales were much less efficient.

          There is no "search" option in a catalog. You had to manually flip through a bazillion pages looking for what you wanted, THEN write out an order form in pen, mail a check, and wait the somewhat standard "Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery".

          With Amazon I can go online and for anything under the threshold where I'm going to comparison shop, I can find it in under 30 seconds, click a few buttons, and it'll show up to my door within two days.

          There are VERY few things that I ne

          • by Penguinisto ( 415985 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @11:56AM (#54875477) Journal

            Catalog sales were much less efficient.

            There is no "search" option in a catalog. You had to manually flip through a bazillion pages looking for what you wanted....

            Back before the days of search DB stacks and Index servers, paper catalogs (and even a lot of non-fiction books) had this thing in the back called an Index. It's that section of the book or catalog where every item was listed in alphabetic order, then listed the page number that contained that item's price and description (and maybe even a picture). If you couldn't find it directly from the index, you flipped to the right section (sporting goods, jewelry, whatever), started leafing through it, and if they sold it, odds are perfect that you found what you were looking for within that section.

            Depending on the individual's level of literacy at the time, it took like a minute or two, tops.

            Regards,
            An old fart who remembers having to find stuff without typing a word/phrase into a search box. ;)

            • And the advantage to Sears, or even Costco today is that the company has vetted the products it wants to sell. Even Ebay does a better job of vetting the products on its platform.

              Case in point, Ebay forces similar products (that are clearly the same item) from different sellers to be grouped together. Compared to Amazon which obfuscates such things. For example, on Amazon do a search for portable fan, sort by price highest to lowest, the same fans will start to appear at the $100ish price point, and will co

          • by torkus ( 1133985 )

            It's actually quite comical to see the 'instant gratification' generation(s) happier with 2-day delayed gratification over the inconvenience of shopping!

            Granted it does let people be even more lazy...I mean save the time they'd spend shopping.

            • by AuMatar ( 183847 )

              Its a matter of what you're looking to optimize for. Most of us hate shopping, and don't actually need the item immediately. Shopping takes time, effort, expense (gas and wear/tear on a car, or bus fare). Online shopping takes a shipping fee. I'd far rather pay 4 bucks cash than an hour of time.

        • by Penguinisto ( 415985 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @10:54AM (#54874979) Journal

          Jut the opposite for me... I live in the sticks, so places like Amazon, Newegg, etc have the selection that the (relatively) local stores do not. Prices are generally lower as well (even when you factor in shipping).

          It's a tradeoff I know, but I'm okay with it given my locale.

          That said, There's lots of specialty websites out there as well, and Amazon ain't the only game in town when it comes to online shopping (e.g. water well filters [filtersfast.com]... kicks the crap out of Amazon's prices, which in turn easily beat the prices found at the local suppliers. Unlike Amazon, the specialty websites also know the products far better.)

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I've almost given up on brick and mortar shops because the never seem to have what I need. Beyond some basic daily life stuff and food, I either have to travel a long way or order online in the UK.

          In Tokyo some shops are offering 1 hour delivery to your door now. Actually the first was Yodobashi, which has several massive physical shops in Tokyo anyway, but some online retailers with warehouses in that area now offer it too.

          Having said that, Yamato Transport, which does deliveries for Amazon, has decided to

        • Nothing beats the convenience of being able to have the item in your hands THEN AND THERE, NO WAITING.

          This is why I rarely shop online.

          Yes, this is one of the reasons why I do most of my shopping from real, physical stores.

          But I do buy a fair amount from Amazon, because they usually carry whatever doohicky I'm looking for and can't find locally. But I've never been too fussed about the amount of time it takes for the goods to arrive. I usually just pick the cheapest shipping option. I particularly like the "free shipping but it'll take a month" option when it comes up.

        • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

          by freeze128 ( 544774 )
          When I heard people say "Sears and Roebuck", I thought they were saying "Sears and Robot". Imagine my disappointment.
        • by torkus ( 1133985 )

          Except there are millions who disagree because their use case differs from yours:

          Those who live in large/busy cities where driving isn't convenient (or NYC where car ownership is just uncommon)

          Those times when you don't need something immediately

          Those times when it's easier to wait 2 days (or less) than spend the time to go to the store

          Those times when you simply CAN'T go to the store (kids, sick, busy, traveling, etc.)

          Things you can't get locally ...and so on.

          Now, I've seen plenty of cases where amazon is

      • A Nintendo Switch? They have it

        If you want to pay 3rd party scalper prices, sure.
        If you just want a Switch at the normal price, nowinstock.net and brickseek.com are your best bets.

    • Yup, you need price comparison extensions in your browser if you want to only shop Amazon. If you can't install those, then you really need an extra tab open to a price comparison site. The irony is that their worst prices are for typical household items that they are pushing with their "Dash" buttons and subscriptions. Cleaning products are typically 50-100% more expensive than at Home Depot.

    • Amazon is no longer reliably cheaper than some brick and mortar options. I have run into this trend more and more in the last couple years.

      You don't use Amazon for the prices anymore, you use it for the selection and "free" shipping.

    • This seems to be mostly a result of Prime.

      Prime is great, but it seems that it's led many people to just buying a ton of random one-off items by themselves that they otherwise would have batched into a larger purchase.

      As a result, even if they're taking a loss sometimes, Amazon is pricing many items such that they'll take a smaller hit on the "free" shipping. Items that Wal-mart sells for $4 might be $7-8 at Amazon, because they have to account for the shipping.

      On more expensive items it's a crap shoot. W

  • camel camel camel (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Mouldy ( 1322581 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @09:50AM (#54874363)
    It's already known that amazon have dynamic pricing - it's not a stretch to assume that mechanism could be used for shady reasons.

    At risk of sounding like a cheesy advertisement: That's why I use camel camel camel!

    For those who don't know; it tells you the price history of any product on amazon - so you can see if they've hiked the prices before putting it on sale or just in general if the price is lower or higher than normal.
    • Indeed. If it looks too good to be true, I check C3 . Sometimes it really is a deal, sometimes it isn't.

    • It's already known that amazon have dynamic pricing - it's not a stretch to assume that mechanism could be used for shady reasons.

      Ummm, I'm not aware of a non-shady reason. I suppose fire sales on overstock, but since they are moving away from owning the items in the store, instead just doing fulfillment, even that risk is going away.

    • Re:camel camel camel (Score:5, Interesting)

      by rikkards ( 98006 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @10:55AM (#54874985) Journal

      Came for this
      It actually saved me about $40 when they decreased the price $40 a day after I bought something. Basically went like this:
      Me: Hey I bought this yesterday and you dropped your price
      Amazon: We don't price match
      Me: Ok I want to return my order with free shipping paid by you (50lb item BTW) and order a new one
      Amazon: ok we will match the price just this once

      Damn straight I will try again if that happens

      • LOL.

        Back in the day I had a flip-phone with one of those nub antennas that had broken off. I walk into the Verizon store and ask the guy at the counter to fix it as I had the phone insured, and guy says he can't do that because it still works. I look at the dude and say "I'm going to go outside to the parking lot and have a horrible accident and then I'll be right back for my new phone".

        He fixed it

    • Indeed, and actually Camel can also be used to show that the complaint in this story is actually mostly a non-issue.

      https://camelcamelcamel.com/re... [camelcamelcamel.com]

      The complained about the price spiking right before prime day. However if you look at that product's history, you can see it also has a history of the price spiking once a month for the last 5 months. Granted all of those spikes were in the $15-$16 range, while the pre-prime-day spike was at $19. So it may have been a bit more extreme, but it's not particularly

  • Sneaky bastards (Score:5, Interesting)

    by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @09:52AM (#54874377)

    I needed a USB drive yesterday and when I went online to get one I noticed Amazon said that since I had a Prime account it was eligible for free same day delivery. On top of that their price was about $15 less than the local retail. (This was a 5TB Seagate, now in service backing stuff up).

    So I ordered, scheduled for delivery in the afternoon, and it came and I thought pretty amazing.

    What I didn't notice until later is that although there was no shipping charge there was a $12 tip for the driver ordered by default. Even had I noticed I don't pull tips from working guys/gals so the end result is that the "free" shipping cost me more than had I just gone with Amazon's regular next day free shipping.

    Caveat emptor and all that. I am all for regulated free market capitalism and I don't think Bezos/Amazon is evil but it is sort of ironic that real the effect (whether it was the intent or not) of AP delivery was to get me to pay the low-end worker directly for work that Amazon now doesn't have to pay for.

    And that's all I have to say about that.

    • I've had mixed success with same-day shipping around here. The first time I used it Amazon had the same price as Best Buy but free one-day shipping instead of me driving 15 minutes each way to Best Buy seemed like a good deal. I needed the item that day. It still wasn't here at end of day, and they didn't seem to understand that's a big problem.

      • I've never seen this 'tip' fee you are referring to. However, the 'free 1 day delivery' only applies if you have at least $35 in total items that are all eligible for free 1 day delivery. Otherwise, 1 day delivery does have a fee which depends on a few different factors, but I've seen this fee from $3 up to $20 or more. I never do it however, because I usually have something on my wishlist that qualifies that I'll add in, or I'll default back to the 2 day shipping.

    • What I didn't notice until later is that although there was no shipping charge there was a $12 tip for the driver ordered by default.

      That sounds like a shipping fee to me.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • I buy a lot of stuff on Amazon but I don't keep a running list of prices. Newegg is a different story. Most of their promotional prices are the same prices they charge every day, and the promotional discounts are just enough to reduce the sales tax being charged. A good deal is once in a blue moon.
    • I don't use newegg for anything anymore except as a source of reviews sometimes or to build out what I want then source elsewhere. It's a crappy thing to do but they're just not the company they used to be.
    • I buy a lot of stuff on Amazon but I don't keep a running list of prices. Newegg is a different story. Most of their promotional prices are the same prices they charge every day, and the promotional discounts are just enough to reduce the sales tax being charged. A good deal is once in a blue moon.

      Newegg is, and has always-been, one of the worst, slowest, most unscrupulous mail-order retailers in history.

  • by Maven0 ( 1673268 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @10:14AM (#54874625)

    You guys seem to think that this is bad. I was in BestBuy the other day to buy a new keyboard and mouse. I decided to look up reviews while i was standing there and noticed that the price on the BestBuy website beat the one in the store for the keyboard by $30, the mouse by $15, and the mouse pad I was also grabbing by $5. I HAD TO ASK THEM TO PRICE MATCH THEIR OWN DAMN WEBSITE!

    • You guys seem to think that this is bad. I was in BestBuy the other day to buy a new keyboard and mouse. I decided to look up reviews while i was standing there and noticed that the price on the BestBuy website beat the one in the store for the keyboard by $30, the mouse by $15, and the mouse pad I was also grabbing by $5. I HAD TO ASK THEM TO PRICE MATCH THEIR OWN DAMN WEBSITE!

      I want to be clear that my response is not a joke. You actually found a worker to complain to? The last time I was in Best Buy I had to go to the greeter guy at the front of the store and demand that he send a drone to the only cash register they had open so we could actually check out. The 2 guys in front of me apparently had been there for 5+ minutes waiting for somebody to actually work the cash register. I saw maybe 5 or 6 workers in the entire store. One of the big problems of retail now is that t

    • In all fairness, by now everyone should know that Best Buy is usually the worst possible place to buy anything.

      • Got a good deal haggling on appliances! But yeah... it is mostly a giant cell phone kiosk now.
  • Not sure if it sucks more and more every year or what... last year's Prime Day was pretty good, though. This year really didn't have many sales, and they were all on dumb shit.
    • Depends on what you wanted. $399 for the Oculus Rift, controllers, and a $100 Amazon gift card (net $299 for the Rift+Contrl) was pretty sweet considering I already order a bunch of stuff from Amazon and that $100 was as good as cash to me.

    • Not sure if it sucks more and more every year or what... last year's Prime Day was pretty good, though. This year really didn't have many sales...

      I thought last year's Prime Day was garbage, but this year, I bought a PS4 Slim w/Uncharted 4 [amazon.com] for $229, and it came with a free download code for The Last of Us Remastered [amazon.com]. I was able to convince my wife to let me buy it since I told her we'd drop Comcast & get PlayStation Vue instead.

    • Depends on what you were looking for. We got a California King Memory foam mattress for $450, a memory foam topper for $100. About a third the cost of an American name-brand mattress ($1500+), and about 25% discount on the mattress regular price. Suguru at half price, among other smaller ticket items.

      • Hey, that's pretty good. I was just looking for some decent nerdy shit... keyboards, peripherals, etc. Maybe some new boardgames and head phones. The US prime day was probably way better than the Canadian one.
    • We didn't buy much we hadn't intended to buy already but waited to see if went on sale. It was still better than the first one, that was just a bizarre collection of junk.
  • by CycleFreak ( 99646 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @10:17AM (#54874645)

    Any manufacturer of sufficient size should be able to put up a web-based order portal where end consumers can buy their products. All they need is fulfillment. The maker of a product should easily be able to undercut any price offered by a retailer. In the past, they never did that because distribution was extremely difficult. This is no longer the case. Wholesale pricing. Distributor pricing. Retail pricing. Bugger all that! Make your product, accurately determine your costs and sell it directly to consumers for 10% more. Charge for shipping. Don't be fooled, shipping is never free. It may be included in the price so it's somewhat hidden, but it's never free.

    Granted, Amazon does fulfillment extremely well. But all you (as a manufacturer) has to do is ship your stuff. Give reasonable delivery times (5 - 7 business days, for example) and people will buy it. Save lots of money or get the product tomorrow? People will almost always choose to save $$.

    Cutting out the middle man has never been easier.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      There are a ton more reasons manufacturers dont want to sell directly to the public. Source, I work for a manufacturer.

      1. Invoicing - invoices don't reconcile themselves automatically.
      2. Logistics - all these one-off deliveries don't package and label themselves.
      3. Returns - these things require a ton of manual intervention to process, rectify and account for.
      4. Partner Relationships - Many existing distribution contracts have clauses to prevent direct to consumer sales. Even if they dont have such a clau

    • by tsstahl ( 812393 )

      A certain return percentage is inevitable. To account for it you have to build the systems your retail customers already have in place. Now you are in the widget selling business, and the widget manufacturing business.

      It makes more sense to ask one of my retail partners *cough* Amazon *Cough* to provide me a branded web presence and sell the product within 5% of my retail customers. This way I'm still in only the widget manufacturing business and have another avenue for good will among the populace.

  • Just wish they stored a price history for other stores besides Amazon. You can see a spike to $18.94 on Prime day. Now I'm curious if the other spikes correspond to other Amazon "sales".

    https://camelcamelcamel.com/remodeez-Footwear-Deodorizer-Charcoal-Moisture/product/B016ZZWL6E [camelcamelcamel.com]
    • The article even mentions that the "was" price on an item is collected from previous sales on Amazon ***AND OTHER RETAILERS***. I think this means that if *ANYONE* sold this $9.99 item for $20.00, then Amazon can use the $20.00 price as a "was" price.

      camelcamelcamel probably won't notice that....
  • Raspberry Pis listed as $50 or so "regular price" but marked "down" to $35 their actual price.

  • You mean Amazon does the same shit every retailer has always done?

    The big story is the people who are fooled by this. About 15% of the population is incredibly stupid. Let us stop fucking up the world trying to drag these fuckers with us.
  • The major retailer Amazon is engaging in the underhanded tricks that nearly all major retailers engage in.

    Rule #1: Don't believe a retailer when they claim they're giving you a great deal. Comparison shopping often reveals the lie.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • "Shady" (Score:4, Insightful)

    by dcw3 ( 649211 ) on Tuesday July 25, 2017 @11:16AM (#54875179) Journal

    Disclaimer: Not talking about this particular case.

    Many of the comments talk about "shady" practices. What many here are failing to understand is that if it's not illegal, it's legal, and businesses are going to do it in order to maximize profits. It's the rare case when they won't act that way...typically when there's concern about some sort of bad press that could affect the bottom line. But in general, if we don't want businesses doing things we consider shady, they need be made illegal, or regulated...especially when it becomes monopolistic.

    And FWIW, I'm saying this as a conservative, small government fan.

  • My wife has tried, time and again, to order household goods we use often with Amazon's Subscribe and Save service. The idea is nice.... Just have the system auto re-order what you need on a set schedule so you never run out of toilet paper or shampoo or deodorant or ??

    The problem is, when we find a product on it we want at a price we like, the re-orders often stop after the first or MAYBE the second time we get a shipment. The reason? Amazon claims the item was discontinued. That or we purposely cancel the

  • Old trick, yes.

    But does it work if you have an ounce of common sense? I was quite interested in Prime day - I give Amazon a LOT of business and Prime is worth it just on postage costs alone, let alone the freebies thrown in.

    However, everything I looked at on Prime day didn't look... anything near amazing. A bit Meh, if I'm honest. I didn't buy a single thing, even the things already on my wishlist. Because nothing made me say "Oh, that's a good deal" or "That's come down in price" or "I better get that w

  • Even if Amazon says it's marked down 99%, you should probably do a quick search to see if another vendor has it for less, unless we're talking about something sold exclusively through Amazon.
  • What I couldn't glean from the references was whether it was Amazon selling, or a third-party, where the historic price was jacked up. I looked at products from the company complaining and found third parties selling for much more than the $9.99, from $18 up to $40-something. I've seen that often on Amazon, for small things, with third parties offering at 10x the price.
    One explanation I'd heard was someone's dynamic pricing reacting to another's dynamic pricing, causing a price spike.

    What I'm not clear o

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