• originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com
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    5 months ago

    its ‘growth at all costs’. profit first and only, quarter over quarter. ‘breaking even’ is failure in the batshit insane world of big business and the stock market. even if everyone gets paid for a job well done and the client is perfectly happy, someone needs to get extra paid . cut corners. cut services. at some point youre too big for it to matter. what are people going to do? go somewhere else? hahahahwalmarthahaha

    • MentalGymnastics@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      So buy it locally then what are you even complaining about? Who gets something they urgently need delivered anyways. Boohoo one of your god knows how many basically free deliveries arrived a day or two late. It costs a burger king whopper meal for a month of free deliveries. Like Amazon should charge entitled ass customers like you more than that. Who even knows why it arrived late? Maybe your delivery driver got mauled by a pitbull and had to go to the hospital? Who gives a fuck though all that matters is your “urgently” needed delivery was late at no fault other than your own for buying something so urgently needed online.

        • MentalGymnastics@sh.itjust.works
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          5 months ago

          Look around, it’s corporations everywhere. The Internet you are using? Corporation. The device you connect to the Internet? Corporation. The place you buy your food? Corporation. The actual food itself? Mostly corporation. The toilet you shit on? Corporation. First it was delayed shipping your mad about. Now your mad about corporations. Can tell your like 15 years old. Don’t worry kid you’ll get it figured out soon.

          You’re talking about “bezos and musk bootlickers” when you’re doing the same shit? You’re bootlicking your local businesses who buy all their inventory from some corporation? Wanna get away from corporations? Move to some remote town with a population or 5000 in some other country maybe in a communist country would suit you well.

  • Apalacrypto@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I’ve also been saying this for a long time, only to be dismissed by most who are apathetic to what’s going on. So now, if I do have to deal with them, I only ever make purchases on my credit card, and if there is a problem, they get 1 chance to fix it before I dispute. In the last year, I’ve had to dispute 3 separate times. On the latest one, the item was never delivered. I asked for a refund or replacement, customer service was useless, so I sent in documents to my bank and disputed. What does Amazon do? They sent their “counter of my claim” to the bank from the shipping SHOWING THE ITEM TO BE UNDELIVERABLE as reason why the charge should not be reversed. My bank sided with me luckily. But they are truly awful now, and have been for a while.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Willing to give 10:1 odds that they’ve turned a bunch of their processes over to LLMs.

      I’m a little surprised they successfully reached your bank with a rebuttal, rather than just firing mail into the ether.

  • HarriPotero@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Consumer rights in the EU are pretty strong. They include two-week free returns, no questions asked, on things purchased online/remote.

    These rights do not extend to businesses, though. Sounds like Amazon is not interested in being helpful unless legislation is twisting their arm.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Just don’t used the world’s largest retailer and hope the next largest retailer isn’t mirroring their business practices.

  • nyan@lemmy.cafe
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    5 months ago

    Amazon lost its way when in started acting as a storefront for others, rather than a bookstore. In other words, a good twenty years ago.

    Tech gear in particular is one of the things that’s extremely risky to order from there (along with food, meds, and anything for babies/small children), as there are a lot of fraudulent or damaged goods mixed into their supply. Go to a specialist supplier instead. Newegg isn’t great, but at least they don’t appear to mix inventory from different sellers the way Amazon does.

  • imposedsensation@lemmynsfw.com
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    5 months ago

    I ordered four 2 TB SSDs from them and got two 2 TB and two 1 TB, but all four had an Amazon barcode saying they were 2 TB. I didn’t immediately install, was waiting for other parts, then once I realized they defrauded me, Amazon said it was more than 30 days and they couldn’t be returned. Trying to get an agent that could help was damn near impossible, and then I had to pay a restocking fee for a mistake that wasn’t mine. I am still shocked they didn’t detect their mistake mislabeling a bunch of SSDs. I’m not going to shop with a company that connects me to a robot, especially the least sophisticated AI robot on the planet. I thought Amazon was a technology leader?