Skip to main content

A 5-star rating is no guarantee you’re getting a safe product on Amazon

If you’ve ever bought a product from seller you’ve never heard of on Amazon, there could be reason for you to worry: third-party sellers on Amazon are reportedly selling items that have been banned, are unsafe, or have been mislabeled.

According to a Wall Street Journal investigation, the retailer has little oversight over the items being sold on its platform by third-party sellers — so little, in fact, that many items are being sold on the site that would be barred from store shelves.

The Journal was able to identify at least 157 items being sold on Amazon that Amazon itself had previously said it banned. In total it was able to identify 4,152 products that shouldn’t have been for sale on the site. The investigation found that 46% of those products were being shipped directly from Amazon warehouses.

After the Journal pointed out the items in question, Amazon removed or altered the wording on 57% of those listings.

Issues with products range from items that have been banned by federal agencies due to safety concerns to toys and medication that don’t include warnings about health risks. One product for sale on Amazon was a sleeping mat that had been banned by the FDA over concerns that it might suffocate infants.

In response to the story, Amazon published a blog post detailing its process for maintaining product safety and compliance in its online store.

“In 2018 alone, we invested over $400 million to protect our store and our customers and built robust programs to ensure products offered are safe, compliant, and authentic,” the company wrote. “Amazon offers customers hundreds of millions of items, and we have developed, and continuously refine and improve, our tools that prevent suspicious, unsafe, or non-compliant products from being listed in our store.”

Amazon says it vets sellers when they open an account using “proprietary machine learning technology that stops bad actors before they can register or list a single product in our store,” and that all products sold in its store must comply with applicable laws and regulations.

And while that 4,000 number might seem large, Amazon argues that it could be significantly larger.

“In 2018, our teams and technologies proactively blocked more than three billion suspect listings for various forms of abuse, including non-compliance, before they were published to our store,” the blog post says.

Editors' Recommendations

Emily Price
Emily is a freelance writer based in San Francisco. Her book "Productivity Hacks: 500+ Easy Ways to Accomplish More at…
Amazon can be held liable for third-party sales, court rules
amazon discounts third party seller items

Amazon’s gargantuan online shopping enterprise received an unwelcome jolt this week when a federal appeals court ruled that the company can be held liable for items sold by third-party sellers on its platform.

Wednesday’s ruling by the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia reversed a lower court decision, and has the potential to expose Amazon to numerous lawsuits related to defective or counterfeit products sold by third-party sellers on its site, Reuters reported. Up to now, such lawsuits have been batted away by Amazon, but this may no longer be the case going forward.

Read more
Your Google Photos app may soon get a big overhaul. Here’s what it looks like
The Google Photos app running on a Google Pixel 8 Pro.

Google Photos is set to get a long-overdue overhaul that will bring new and improved sharing and notification features to the app. With its automatic backups, easy sorting and search, and album sharing, Google Photos has always been one of the better photo apps, and now it's set to get a whole slew of AI features.

According to an APK teardown done by Android Authority and the leaker AssembleDebug, Google is now set to double down on improving sharing features. Google Photos will get a new social-focused sharing page in version 6.85.0.637477501 for Android devices.

Read more
The numbers are in. Is AMD abandoning gamers for AI?
AMD's RX 7700 XT in a test bench.

The data for the first quarter of 2024 is in, and it's bad news for the giants behind some of the best graphics cards. GPU shipments have decreased, and while every GPU vendor experienced this, AMD saw the biggest drop in shipments. Combined with the fact that AMD's gaming revenue is down significantly, it's hard not to wonder about the company's future in the gaming segment.

The report comes from the analyst firm Jon Peddie Research, and the news is not all bad. The PC-based GPU market hit 70 million units in the first quarter of 2024, and from year to year, total GPU shipments (which includes all types of graphics cards) increased by 28% (desktop GPU shipments dropped by -7%, and CPU shipments grew by 33.3%). Comparing the final quarter of 2023 to the beginning of this year looks much less optimistic, though.

Read more