What’s so hard about opening the door and kicking the box into the street? Picking it up and tossing it in the trash? Maybe donate them to the homeless or the needy? Crying about free stuff, their life must be tough.
You didn’t read the article, she gives them away to friends but has no way of storing them and is in a battle with UPS to stop unjust delivery charges.
Also some people have ethics about littering or contributing to needless waste.
I won’t, but I’m sure if you had the excess money to pursue litigation you could at least make my life quite difficult in the meantime.
I mean it wouldn’t take much to start her own store on ebay, or amazon, or wherever and just start reselling them, even for a couple bucks profit a piece after shipping and fees, this should be like manna from heaven, free stuff, i mean, what lol, just sell the stuff on
Just don’t pay lol? Free shoes, open an ebay store.
When life gives you shoes
When life gives you shoes, you open a shoe store. (or just donate them)
Amazon isn’t the one responsible for this action; rather, it’s the sellers who are altering the return address of their products to evade return fees. Opting for a random address is a more cost-effective choice for them. Amazon can stop it.
So it’s not Amazon’s responsibility to confirm the address of companies they allow to sell products on their site? I think that’s at least partially in Amazon’s domain, they can at least confirm addresses and where sellers are shipping products from compared to their return labels. It may be cost effective but if the seller doesn’t expect their shoes back why even bother? Oh cause then customers would take advantage… yeah can’t have that.
The responsibility lies with Amazon, although it’s probable that sellers manipulated the automated-system, a tactic they frequently employ.
Morally yes in the sense that they can do shit about it and bloody should, legally I think the ball is in the court of delivery companies, though. Providing fake return addresses is not something they should let senders get away with, least of all commercial ones. Write contractual damages into the delivery contract, hook legal up to the data feed, done.