Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Feds: Amazon is responsible for the quality of products sold on its site

E-commerce giant is responsible for recall of defective or unsafe products, federal regulators say.

premium_photo-1694281930432-18b307e102b5.jpeg

The mega-retailer Amazon is accountable for distributing unsafe products sold on its platform by third parties, according to a decision released today by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC).

The policy came as a unanimous vote by the commission, holding that Amazon was a “distributor” of products that are defective or fail to meet federal consumer product safety standards, and therefore bears legal responsibility for their recall. More than 400,000 products are subject to this order: specifically, faulty carbon monoxide (CO) detectors, hairdryers without electrocution protection, and children’s sleepwear that violated federal flammability standards.


The Commission determined that these products, listed on Amazon.com and sold by third-party sellers using the Fulfilled by Amazon program, pose a “substantial product hazard” under the Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA). Further, Amazon failed to notify the public about these hazardous products and did not take adequate steps to encourage its customers to return or destroy them, thereby leaving consumers at substantial risk of injury, the CPSC said.

Amazon did not reply to a request for comment.

According to the CPSC, Amazon had argued before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) and the Commission that it was not a distributor and bore no responsibility for the safety of the products sold under its Fulfilled by Amazon program.

However, under the Commission’s Decision and Order, Amazon must now submit proposed plans to notify consumers and the public about the hazardous products, and to remove the products from commerce by incentivizing their return or destruction. The Commission will consider Amazon’s proposed plans and address them in a second order in this case.

The decision was cheered by the retail sector nonprofit and advocacy group Consumer Reports, which said the decision set an important precedent for consumers’ safety online.

"This is clearly the right decision,” Oriene Shin, policy counsel for Consumer Reports, said in a release. “There’s no good reason for a company to be exempt from these sensible requirements just because it hosts an online marketplace; otherwise, products that could injure or kill people might slip through the cracks. Consumers are affected either way, and need the company to step up.”

According to Consumer Reports, the Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA), a federal product safety law passed in 1972, empowers the CPSC with the authority to file a lawsuit and conduct an adjudicative proceeding to require a manufacturer, distributor, or seller to carry out a safety recall. This proceeding can lead to a mandatory recall order requiring a company to take various actions, such as notifying the public, offering consumers a sufficient remedy, providing monthly recall progress reports, and destroying defective products in its possession.


 

 

 

 

 

The Latest

More Stories

imperative jamco US mexico trade

Imperative Logistics Group acquires JAMCO

The domestic and global freight forwarder Imperative Logistics Group has acquired JAMCO, a U.S.-Mexico cross-border and international logistics provider, the firms said today.

The move comes five months after Portland, Oregon-based Imperative rebranded from its previous name, Magnate Worldwide. And just two months before that, Magnate had acquired the Milwaukee-based logistics provider Quality Air Forwarding.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

seagull mojix labels traceability

Seagull and Mojix merger seeks item-level traceability

Seagull Software, which makes “BarTender” label management software, today said it has combined with Mojix, a provider of item-level inventory management and traceability.

As a single company, the combined firms will offer new capabilities in end-to-end supply chain management, leveraging BarTender’s global customer base and value-added channel partner network with more than 250,000 customers across 175 countries.

Keep ReadingShow less
screen shot of AI tools on a laptop

SAP extends AI tools to 80% of its most-used business tasks

Enterprise software vendor SAP SE today released a suite of “game-changing” artificial intelligence (AI) features for business applications, including collaborative agents, knowledge graph capabilities, and generative AI developer features.

The features are based on SAP’s “generative AI copilot” platform called Joule, launched about a year ago. The latest upgrades to that product add collaborative AI agents that truly speak the language of business, expand Joule’s capabilities to support 80% of SAP’s most-used business tasks, and embed Joule more deeply within the company’s portfolio.

Keep ReadingShow less
Elizabeth Gallenagh
Elizabeth Gallenagh

Strong medicine: interview with Elizabeth Gallenagh

For players in the drug distribution business, the countdown is on. In less than two months, every business involved in the pharmaceutical supply chain must be fully compliant with the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA)a 2013 law containing strict traceability requirements for the distribution of certain prescription drugs. Over the past decade, the DSCSA has been implemented in phases, but now the clock is running out. The law takes full effect on Nov. 27, barring any further adjustments or delays.

Among other measures, the DSCSA requires drug manufacturers to affix a unique product identifier, essentially a barcode, to every package so it can be tracked and traced during its journey through the supply chain. To thwart drug counterfeiters, the new law further requires wholesalers and drug dispensers to verify the validity of products they handle to assure they are genuine.

Keep ReadingShow less
Corvus Robotics launches drones for lights-out warehouses
Corvus Robotics

Corvus Robotics launches drones for lights-out warehouses

Autonomous inventory management system provider Corvus Robotics is delivering drone technology for lights-out warehouse environments with the newest version of its Corvus One drone system, announced today.

The update is supported by an $18 million funding round led by S2G Ventures and Spero Adventures.

Keep ReadingShow less