Well now the tracking number says it is "out for delivery" in Brandford CT. That is about 1000 miles away from where i am. The ship to address is my address. No clue how it got to this location. IT was in chicago last night which is only a few hundred miles away.
Looks like im screwed. Either the postoffice cant read a proper address or ???
Someone in CT got a nice set of tools.
what a **** show.
Amazon doesn't care as it was a 3rd party seller through their site.
Amazon doesn't care as it was a 3rd party seller through their site.
They said i need to contact the seller which is impossible. They dont return emails....which is clear by everyone stating they dont return emails when they are contacted. I emailed screenshots of my order, the email from amazon showing the price, my tracking, address and actually delivery location times etc to their customer service team which will aid them if they have open an investigation against the seller. That doesnt help me but hey......there you have it. IM going to try and call them again to see if i get anywhere. In the end I am only out about $30.
This seller clearly orchastrated a mass scam on this date. There are tons (200+) of reviews of people that got ripped off with packages that got delivered to the wrong addresses all over the country.
https://www.amazon.com/sp?seller=A1H1ZFZUSKWE8T
They said i need to contact the seller which is impossible. They dont return emails....which is clear by everyone stating they dont return emails when they are contacted. I emailed screenshots of my order, the email from amazon showing the price, my tracking, address and actually delivery location times etc to their customer service team which will aid them if they have open an investigation against the seller. That doesnt help me but hey......there you have it. IM going to try and call them again to see if i get anywhere. In the end I am only out about $30.
This seller clearly orchastrated a mass scam on this date. There are tons (200+) of reviews of people that got ripped off with packages that got delivered to the wrong addresses all over the country.
https://www.amazon.com/sp?seller=A1H1ZFZUSKWE8T
This may not be popular with the group, but I've never cared about being popular. And I'm not being self-righteous because I've done the same thing. But I am advocating for something called TANSTAAFL aka 'there ain't no such thing as a free lunch.'
As I see things:
1. The OP stumbled on a deal that was likely too good to be true. He knew from the beginning it was too good to be true.
2. In spite of that, the larceny in his (and every human) heart convinced him to give it a try anyway, even though the chance of it being legitimate was extremely small.
3. The honest and best thing for the OP to do is to kiss his $30 goodbye, lick his wounds, learn from his mistake and resolve never to do it again.
4. If he puts the burden of his poor judgment onto Amazon, it is something that we all eventually pay for in higher Amazon prices. Amazon isn't going to just eat the loss, they will pass it on to all their customers--US.
If we all believed in TANSTAAFL then the likelihood of anyone getting ripped off is DRASTICALLY reduced. It's the larcency in our hearts that makes us believe we can get something for nothing that entices us along this path. By REALLY believing in TANSTAAFL we might miss the odd "screaming deal" but neither will we get separated from our $$$ by a charlatan.
^^^
Agreed. I got a proto slide hammer kit ($500) for a little over $100 off amazon about a year ago. It was only that price for a few minutes and I, for whatever reason, had just googled that part number for a reason I can't really remember (already had an OTC kit). Sold the OTC and kept the Proto then.
There's no larceny. It's simply the new age where auto-bots dictate prices by an algorithm. If you're in the right place at the right time you get a helluva deal.
I grew up w a single mom who scraped by, cut coupons and demanded discounts when they were within the rules. There's stealing and then there's being frugal. BIG difference.
Sometimes Amazon's pricing algorithms screw up. I bet it cost them close to $50 just to ship the damn things!
And by your own admission you took advantage of a clear mistake on Amazon's part. Legal yes, ethical no. Golden rule always applies my friends. How sad it is when we try to justify not living it.
But Amazon? I don't feel the same about a large, publicly-traded company involved in restructuring the American economy and who's exploited workers in their warehouses... I don't know.
I know many folks exploited Sears' guarantee over the years. And yeah, we're all going to pay for that one. But Amazon? I don't feel the same about a large, publicly-traded company involved in restructuring the American economy and who's exploited workers in their warehouses... I don't know.
Maybe if they treated their workers better they'd make less errors when entering in prices![]()
Amazon treats their workers poorly?
And by your own admission you took advantage of a clear mistake on Amazon's part. Legal yes, ethical no. The Golden Rule always applies my friends. How sad it is when we try to justify not living it.
When one gets a "helluva deal" to the point that you know the transaction is costing the seller money, it ceases to be OK. Let's say that your favorite box store mis-prices something for $50 that should obviously have been $500. Sure, legally you could insist they honor that price, but doing so is morally wrong. You are taking advantage of a mistake. Does anyone remember the golden rule anymore?
How do you know when a price is clearance vs a mistake?

When one gets a "helluva deal" to the point that you know the transaction is costing the seller money, it ceases to be OK. Let's say that your favorite box store mis-prices something for $50 that should obviously have been $500. Sure, legally you could insist they honor that price, but doing so is morally wrong. You are taking advantage of a mistake. Does anyone remember the golden rule anymore?
What? Sears isn't a "large publicly traded" company??? They should be treated differently in your opinion? Why exactly?
Amazon treats their workers poorly? Any data to back this up?
I operate a small business, and if I lose money on a sale because of a mistaken price, I take the hit. That's my problem, not the customer's.