Comment by Moru

Comment by Moru 2 days ago

26 replies

I'm curious with what you mean with "Even sold by Amazon". The last few years I see nothing but reports of cheap fake products over Amazon.

Years ago I ordered some T-Shirts to test and they were all fake versions that barely survived the first wash. Haven't ordered anything since then.

reeddavid 2 days ago

I think this comment references something many people don't realize: Even items that say "Ships from Amazon, Sold by Amazon" could be counterfeit, because the inventory from third party sellers is co-mingled with Amazon's own inventory.

If you see "Ships from Amazon, Sold by RandomCompany" you might worry about counterfeits. But the "Sold by Amazon" item might also have been sourced from (or counterfeited by) "RandomCompany".

  • dataflow a day ago

    > co-mingled

    Note it's actually commingled - it's not a typo despite looking like one.

  • trenchpilgrim 2 days ago

    I began noticing this about seven or eight years ago when the oil filters I bought changed from official ones to obvious counterfeits (certain pieces were missing entirely + media was much thinner than the real ones). Had to switch to a local auto parts supplier to guarantee the correct part.

    • dotancohen 2 days ago

      How did you notice that the media was thinner? On passenger vehicles at least, the filter media is in a stainless steel cup that precludes examination.

      • hangonhn a day ago

        BMW at least has the media completely exposed. There is no canister like you might find on Honda oil filters. Basically on BMWs the oil filter housing is permanent. I don't think it's a BMW specific thing. Might be a German car thing?

      • trenchpilgrim a day ago

        It was a suzuki with a paper filter cartridge you load into a metal cylinder that is part of the engine. So you can see and feel the media.

      • lazide a day ago

        Toyota Tundra filters (at least) are the ‘innie’ pieces, and the cup is a removable/reusable part on the vehicle. A counterfeit would be pretty obvious unless it was at the microscopic level.

  • gmac 2 days ago

    I’ve seen this stated many times on HN, but never knowingly experienced it with Amazon in the UK. Is it possible this varies by market?

    • esskay 2 days ago

      It does happen with Amazon UK, or at least has within the last year because I've twice had it, first time with a microsd card, second time with an ssd.

      They obviously replaced it no problem but it highlighted they were either still mixing stock or were using a dodgy supplier themselves.

    • ChiefNotAClue 2 days ago

      For what it's worth, been buying from Amazon for the past 15 years or so, and not once received a counterfeit product. Granted, I still don't like they they mix up their inventory, but I think it's a smaller problem than people make it to be. Most people are buying household supplies off of Amazon; that's not really a category that gets affected by counterfeits.

      • FireBeyond a day ago

        I can say I've received counterfeit camera and laptop batteries, counterfeit chargers and USB chargers (like Anker), and SD/microSD cards from Amazon.

        All of that stuff I buy now from BH or Adorama.

        • elevation 8 hours ago

          B&H is a hidden gem. I came across them because I needed a camera, but they sell lots of other stuff and their sales team consists of actual humans who have physically used the products they sell, and a supply chain they actually control. In the past, I’ve talked to a real human there who:

          * verified the un-advertised compatibility between an accessory and the device I was buying it for (hours of googling had not been able to confirm this for me)

          * explained their personal experience with both the Sony and Canon cameras I was considering

          * nearly price-matched another vendor’s sale on a large purchase of Dell monitors

          They have their own warehouses with real physical stock ordered directly from suppliers, (no drop shipping and no third party sellers.) One order I received even came with a hand written note signed by the salesman who’d help me select it. A nice touch, but impossible for an operation at Amazon scale.

          These days B&H is my preferred vendor for PCs+components, AV gear, SMB network equipment.

    • zh3 2 days ago

      Amazon UK With replacement phone or laptop batteries, most definitely. I've seen other stuff sold that looked sketchy enough to not be worth the risk.

      • dotancohen 2 days ago

        Most definitely what? There are counterfeits, or there are not counterfeits?

kaelwd 2 days ago

Amazon is literally just aliexpress with faster shipping at this point.

  • mook 2 days ago

    Hmm, does AliExpress do inventory commingling too? I see that they do seem to have something about managed inventories… because I was originally going to say that things bought from "flagship stores" on AliExpress might be more likely to be authentic, but now I'm unsure.

    • dotancohen 2 days ago

      Cables and chargers I will only buy from the official Ugreen store on AliExpress. They are excellent. All other cables and chargers I've seen on AliExpress on junk firestarters waiting to happen.

      • bryyyon a day ago

        I've had a good track record with Ugreen too. Over the years I've picked up a bunch of their stuff.. adapters, cables, mounts, whatever, and every single purchase has been sturdy and reliable.

      • stavros a day ago

        I also buy Baseus, though good luck figuring out which of the ten stores is the official one.

  • prmoustache 2 days ago

    In my experience, Amazon is also generally more expensive than online shops specialized in one domain for branded non generic aliexpresslike items.

    • terribleperson 2 days ago

      With the exception of those shops who sell on Amazon, who have to offer a better price on Amazon than on their own site.

      I'm noticing an increasing number of brands who don't have an official Amazon presence, probably for that reason.

fx1994 2 days ago

Lots of stuff on Amazon is also from Aliexpress or Temu. Crap, so if I need crap I'll try it on Aliexpress.

alfiedotwtf a day ago

I ordered a Springer published book on Prolog from Amazon, and it was obviously printer but professional book publisher. The only difference was that almost half the physical dimensions of Springer’s usual books, and it looked as though it was printed from a DJVU file downloaded from the Internet!!