• Hyperreality@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Europe:

    1. ‘Local’ stores were/are often ridiculously overpriced, had a very limited range, and it’s not like we’re talking about independent stores either. Many of those were killed by the unfair practices of large corporate chains who would sell at a loss. Before amazon killed chain mall businesses, the mall killed independent businesses on the high street.
    2. Packages are delivered to me personally. If I’m not there, they don’t deliver and are forced to try another time.
    3. No need for a PO box, as small independent stores and grocery stores often have a side hussle as a pick-up point. You go to pick-up your parcel and buy something in their store or do your groceries.
    4. Amazon prime is entirely unnecessary. You simply have to wait a bit longer.
    5. You can find independent sellers on amazon, then if their product is good, you buy from them directly next time around.
    6. Thanks to amazon, ebay, etc. it’s become far easier to buy second hand products. In the past you’d have to go to a second hand market, garage sales or visit twenty vintage/antique stores to find what you needed.

    Amazon is evil though. So, yeah.

    But there are perfectly rational reasons to use amazon.

    • Veltoss@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Same here in the US Midwest. 90% of these fabled amazing local businesses are incredibly overpriced and often run by assholes who treat you like shit, treat their employees even worse, and often don’t know their products any better than a Walmart employee. Also often incredibly right wing, which of course connects to them treating their employees like shit again.

      If I’m going to support bad people and bad business I’d rather do it in a way that benefits me.

    • Squids@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Yeah if you live in like, Germany or France

      More like Europe: sorry we don’t ship there lol. Oh we do? Hope you like paying twice the price for shipping that takes two weeks if you’re lucky

      • collegefurtrader@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        Thats not a rule, but what they do have is a process that enables dickheads to ship cheap/substandard crap for an item that used to be highly rated thanks to the original seller.

      • zout@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Then their product isn’t good, so you don’t buy from them next round? Doesn’t make it false.

          • zout@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            So, if I understand it correct, when you order from a third party through Amazon, the third party never gets the order but Amazon sends something else instead? That wouldn’t be legal in Europe.

            • atrielienz@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              What’s happening is to save space Amazon stores all items of the same likeness in bulk containers. The worker who fills the order just picks up one from the container. This is why buying memory cards (micro SD and so on) is such a crapshoot these days on Amazon. They aren’t necessarily shipping you what the independent seller shipped them. They’re shipping you one from a bulk container with the contents that many independent sellers shipped them.

    • Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      I’ve found a lot of times, trying to buy directly from the independent seller is still fulfilled by Amazon assuming they don’t just do all of the e-commerce through Amazon. I end up with slower, more expensive shipping and Amazon still gets a cut.

      We don’t have many “local” stores where I am, except for the hardware store which is a franchise. The local stores are all owned by a large out of state corporation. I still try to support them since they employ people in the community. We have multiple Amazon warehouses in the area too, between that and the delivery stuff they employ a lot more people than the local stores do and many products have same day delivery, so even there the math isn’t simple. The options are usually how much do I want to pay and which corporation do I want to give money to.