Hi All
Are you like me, fed up to the back teeth with buyers trying it on for refunds through false INR claims.
One yesterday & another two today all proved false by copy / pasting a scan of the Royal Mail delivery, date, time & GPS drop pin. Amazon are encouraging this behaviour & whilst they say that they take these matters seriously I have yet to see evidence of Amazon intervention & I feel it's time that these scammers were outed for what they are!
I saw a story on TV last week about a convivence store putting photos of shoplifters in his shop window. Thieves were coming in & saying that they would pay for goods in return for their photo being taken out of the window.
This got me thinking, How would sellers feel about sharing data of buyers who have been caught out. I am not suggesting full names & address but perhaps something like
E.JONES, KT12 6NR claimed INR for a book on ...... etc
The list could be added to all the time & help to highlight repeat offenders. You can better your bottom dollar that this will attract the attention of moderators, but perhaps that is not a bad thing because it's high time that Amazon dealt with these individuals.
Let me know if there is an appetite for this too happen & we will make it happen!
I suspect most sellers would be concerned about their liability for breaching GDPR / Data Protection.
Hi All
Are you like me, fed up to the back teeth with buyers trying it on for refunds through false INR claims.
One yesterday & another two today all proved false by copy / pasting a scan of the Royal Mail delivery, date, time & GPS drop pin. Amazon are encouraging this behaviour & whilst they say that they take these matters seriously I have yet to see evidence of Amazon intervention & I feel it's time that these scammers were outed for what they are!
I saw a story on TV last week about a convivence store putting photos of shoplifters in his shop window. Thieves were coming in & saying that they would pay for goods in return for their photo being taken out of the window.
This got me thinking, How would sellers feel about sharing data of buyers who have been caught out. I am not suggesting full names & address but perhaps something like
E.JONES, KT12 6NR claimed INR for a book on ...... etc
The list could be added to all the time & help to highlight repeat offenders. You can better your bottom dollar that this will attract the attention of moderators, but perhaps that is not a bad thing because it's high time that Amazon dealt with these individuals.
Let me know if there is an appetite for this too happen & we will make it happen!
Hi All
Are you like me, fed up to the back teeth with buyers trying it on for refunds through false INR claims.
One yesterday & another two today all proved false by copy / pasting a scan of the Royal Mail delivery, date, time & GPS drop pin. Amazon are encouraging this behaviour & whilst they say that they take these matters seriously I have yet to see evidence of Amazon intervention & I feel it's time that these scammers were outed for what they are!
I saw a story on TV last week about a convivence store putting photos of shoplifters in his shop window. Thieves were coming in & saying that they would pay for goods in return for their photo being taken out of the window.
This got me thinking, How would sellers feel about sharing data of buyers who have been caught out. I am not suggesting full names & address but perhaps something like
E.JONES, KT12 6NR claimed INR for a book on ...... etc
The list could be added to all the time & help to highlight repeat offenders. You can better your bottom dollar that this will attract the attention of moderators, but perhaps that is not a bad thing because it's high time that Amazon dealt with these individuals.
Let me know if there is an appetite for this too happen & we will make it happen!
I suspect most sellers would be concerned about their liability for breaching GDPR / Data Protection.
I suspect most sellers would be concerned about their liability for breaching GDPR / Data Protection.
I suspect most sellers would be concerned about their liability for breaching GDPR / Data Protection.