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Amazon Erases Orders To Cover Up Pricing Mistake

The Knife writes "Amazon secretly canceled orders for a large jazz CD set after realizing that it had mis-priced the item at $31 instead of its MSRP of $499. At first, inventory shortages caused the online merchant to string customers along for over a month after they placed their orders. But when Amazon realized that the box set was under-priced by $470, it simply erased all records of customers' order in their account history. No emails were sent to customers informing them of the price change or of the order cancellation. Probably because it violates Amazon's highly publicized price guarantee policy. A customer who called to complain and request the CD set at the $31 price was given a $20 discount off of his next Amazon order." A caveat: there is no external confirmation that Amazon did what is claimed here.

54 of 338 comments (clear)

  1. Bad Summary. by adam · · Score: 4, Informative

    Probably because it violates Amazon's highly publicized price guarantee policy
    Gee, let's check amazon's price guarantee policy and see what it says at the bottom...

    Despite our best efforts, a small number of the items in our catalog may be mispriced. If an item's correct price is higher than our stated price, we will, at our discretion, either contact you for instructions before shipping or cancel your order and notify you of such cancellation.
    So, um, basically, their policy allows for them to cancel orders at their discretion. Which is approximately what it said in 2001, when I placed an order for 4 plasma TVs they had priced at $27/each. A few days later, they cancelled my order (along with the others of several others I know who were hoping for cheap TVs!). This has happened many times before with Amazon-- although by many I mean "several, that I am aware of," which is probably really good, considering the sheer volume of sales Amazon does. So, basically, nothing to see here.. move along. The product was priced incorrectly, they didn't charge anyone, they cancelled the orders. This is common practice for Amazon and other merchants.
    --
    I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.
    1. Re:Bad Summary. by phillips321 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You missed the point! Order's were canceled and the customer was not informed about it. Amazon's policy clearly states:
      "and notify you of such cancellation"

    2. Re:Bad Summary. by eyrieowl · · Score: 3, Insightful

      that may be the point, but it's a weak one. is it really news to all of us that sometimes companies don't follow all the steps they say they are? if amazon had charged them, failed to deliver, and "forgotten" about the orders, that would be one thing, but the harm done here is...somewhat minimal. did anyone die b/c they didn't get their fire-sale priced box set? thought not. while i'd certainly be sad if i found out i couldn't get the deal of a lifetime, eh, you don't win the lottery every day.

    3. Re:Bad Summary. by sentientbeing · · Score: 5, Funny

      Shopper: '...You hadn't exactly gone out of your way to call attention to the cancellation notices had you? I mean like actually telling anyone or anything.'

      Amazon: 'But the cancelled sales were on display...'

      Shopper: 'On display? I eventually had to go down to the cellar to find them.'

      Amazon: 'That's the display department.'

      Shopper: 'With a torch.'

      Amazon: 'Ah, well the lights had probably gone.'

      Shopper: 'So had the stairs.'

      Amazon: 'But look you found the notice didn't you?'

      Shopper: 'Yes,' said the buyer, 'yes I did. It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying "Beware of The Leopard'

      --

      ------
      beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his mind he dreams himself your master
    4. Re:Bad Summary. by Valdrax · · Score: 4, Informative

      Your points are all really irrelevant to whether or not they performed the contract. Harm, for purposes of recovery, is the difference between the price listed and the next best price. Also, an industry standard practice of not living up to one's contracts is generally not held to be a legal excuse for not doing so if someone calls you on it.

      Also, a contract of this sort is generally considered to be binding when the site gives you order confirmation, and you submit it. At that point, offer and acceptance has been had (even under the older UCC Article 2). The time at which they charge you or not is irrelevant in this situation.

      The question essentially is, "Was there a breach of contract?" Since we've established that there was one, the question of whether deleting an order without sending you a message is a breach needs to be answered. Most likely (not knowing any further information about their ordering policies), it seems like there would be one under the notification rule the earlier poster made.

      However, It's really a tempest in a teacup because no one is likely to sue them for it, and without a print-out of the order confirmation, there's no evidence the contract was ever made. Courts are unlikely to allow people to claim phantom orders on websites without any proof, and most states would make you go to small claims court for damages this small (which wouldn't allow you the discovery necessary to make Amazon.com cough up the proof that they did it). For a mere $350 bucks, most sane people wouldn't bother.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    5. Re:Bad Summary. by Broken+scope · · Score: 2, Funny

      Something between redundant and off topic i guess.

      --
      You mad
    6. Re:Bad Summary. by jasonwc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, you're jumping to conclusions. The fact that there was a breach of contract doesn't mean that the buyer can recover for the contract price - the next best available price. You point out that once there has been an offer and acceptance, a binding contract is created and Amazon is unable to repudiate. While that is true, the contract clearly allowed Amazon to cancel a buyer's order if the price was set incorrectly which certainly was the case here. Thus, Amazon was justified in its cancellation of the buyers' orders. If there was a breach, it was only the failure to notify the buyer of the order cancellation. I'm not sure from the contract terms whether a court would find there was a breach. The terms may be read as suggesting Amazon's current policy of notification rather than binding themselves to do so. In any event, a buyer would not be able to recover for the contract price - the best available price because that does not reflect the damages actually suffered. The buyer's expectation damages ought to put him in the position he would have been in had the contract been performed. Since Amazon's only failure was to notify him of the order cancellation, damages should be assessed based on the harm which resulted from lack of notification. In addition, it seems pretty clear in context that when UCC 2-711 speaks of the sellers failure to make delivery, it's referring to an unjustified refusal, rather than a justified refusal combined with a relatively minor breach. In the instant case, a court would likely award nominal damages due to the lack of any clear harm to the buyer.

      Furthermore, the measure of damages had there been an unjustified refusal to make delivery would be based on the difference between the market price of the good at the time when the buyer learned of the breach and the contract price (2-713) or in the alternative, the buyer could "cover" by buying the item at another retailer and sue for the difference between the contract price and the purchase price of the replacement (2-712). Cover doesn't even require that the price be the "next best price" - only that it is made in good faith and without unreasonable delay. This may very well exceed the market price if the buyer wants the item immediately and is willing to pay a higher price for the convenience of a local retailer.

    7. Re:Bad Summary. by baboo_jackal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually, this reminds me more of the people who stand at the register and argue with the manager, "But it was on the 99-cent rack, so you *have* to sell it to me for 99 cents!"

      Fortunately, those people don't know about Slashdot yet...

    8. Re:Bad Summary. by 1u3hr · · Score: 3, Informative
      the question essentially is, "Was there a breach of contract?" Since we've established that there was one

      Nothiing has been established. There is a pseudonymous post to Slashdot. No supporting documents. No screenshots. No names. Not a single detail that can be verified. This is not news, it's not even gossip.

    9. Re:Bad Summary. by zazzel · · Score: 3, Informative

      I don't know US contract law, but in other parts of the world (Germany), courts have regularly ruled that an on-line order is not in itself a contract, but simply a demand for a contract that must be acknowledged by the other party (the dealer) in words or deeds to become a valid contract. So, delivery of the item, immediate billing, or an e-mail (not a simple "we received your order" e-mail) would make this a contract.

    10. Re:Bad Summary. by mikiN · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Ok, to soup this up a bit with respect to the plasma TV sale mentioned earlier.

      Say that I bought 4 plasma TV's at the listed price of $27/each, printed the confirmation and used that to negotiate with my partners to hold a big presentation of my product at the Ritz, wining and dining included. Now say Amazon didn't confirm their cancellation of my order. Would I be able to claim damages because their failure to confirm cancellation caused me to fail to cancel the presentation in time?

      --
      The Hacker's Guide To The Kernel: Don't panic()!
    11. Re:Bad Summary. by Sancho · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's still a bad summary. The awful, awful summary posits that Amazon did not notify their customers because it violated their policy to cancel the order. Clearly it does not violate their policy to cancel the order--the only policy violation was, in fact, failing to notify the customer's about it. The submitter is putting the cart before the horse, so to speak.

      In other words, the submitter thinks that Amazon violated its own policy, and tried to cover it up by silently deleting the orders. Based on that policy snippet, that does not seem to be the case.

    12. Re:Bad Summary. by Dogtanian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You must be a first year law student Valdrax. If he was, he'd still be better-qualified to talk about how the law works than 99.9% of the people contributing to this and similar Slashdot discussions.

      The problem is that although some people here probably know what they're talking about, it's hard to judge which ones they are without spending more time than it's worth sorting them out from the undeclared IANALs. (Skip to the final paragraph for the main point minus the waffle).

      You have to ask yourself- what level of knowledge is this person arguing from? Do they even understand the basics of what they're discussing? If so, do they understand the finer points and exceptions that apply to "corner cases" such as this one? Unless you already know the law pretty well (I don't), it's often impossible to judge- and whilst I'm no expert and don't pretend to be one, I don't intend to be a blind man being led by another overconfident but equally blind man.

      In all honesty, *any* Slashdot discussion about the finer points of law will quickly become an intellectual wankfest that mixes up basic misunderstanding, myths, attempts to reason out what the law actually is (*1) and assumptions that the way the law *should* be is the way that it actually is. (*2)

      The law does have intellectual consistency, but not in the way that Slashdot-style pseudo-logic can be applied to it. Otherwise, engineers would make great lawyers and vice versa.

      (*1) No, you can't always logically deduce what the law actually is through logic- particularly not corner cases. The law is what the law is, even when it doesn't always make sense. It's an example of the conceit that you can apply geek/engineer-style logic to any field. In a way, this is the same point as *2 below.

      (*2) Yes, the law sometimes sucks and is stupid- and it's perfectly valid to discuss its flaws and how it should behave. But the fact remains- you *can't* assume that the way it *should* be, or even the way that "common sense" (or some convoluted pseudo-intellectual Slashdot argument) says it should be is the way that it actually is.

      To cut the above short, threads like this are basically useless for shedding light rather than heat, because the majority of contributors are IANALs who'll try to (incorrectly) apply pseudo-logical reason to cover their lack of legal expertise.
      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    13. Re:Bad Summary. by joto · · Score: 4, Interesting

      False advertising is false advertising and as such is fraudulent. I wonder if Amazon had overpriced items would they voluntarily give the money back.

      They don't have to. All you need to do is to send your item back, and you will get your money back. As all reputable online vendors, they have a full money-back guarantee.

      Besides, there's a big difference between false advertizing, and human error. This was most likely human error. Apart from the fact that there's no way amazon can make money from deleting customer orders, or prizing items so low they are guaranteed to lose a significant amount of money (and getting nothing in return), there is no indication that this is a systematic thing that amazon does often or deliberately.

      Hanlon's razor states: "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity". I think that should tell you enough. Someone amazon employee screwed up. Naturally, when the screwup is discovered, they fix it up, to avoid taking a big loss. That's all there is to it.

    14. Re:Bad Summary. by eyrieowl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      i don't recall mentioning contract. were i in contract law, i might give a rip about the legal definition of harm. however, in my news stories, i prefer people to save their hyperbole for stories where real harm is occurring, not where they got stymied in their attempt to screw a corporation. so, i stand by my statement that no real harm occurred, and that this is not really news. there are enough real examples of corporations causing financial damage and ruin that we need not resort to such trivialities we see highlighted here.

    15. Re:Bad Summary. by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's an honest mistake and I think people would be clearly unreasonable if they didn't like Amazon coming clean and declared this a misprice. But if it's true that Amazon just erased all traces of their order without explanation or notice, then I would have a problem with that.

    16. Re:Bad Summary. by Ecuador · · Score: 4, Informative

      No, YOU missed the point. The article is simple libel. I ordered the Jazz set at $30 (I saw it on the FatWallet forum), knowing that it would probably cancel, and sure enough I did get the cancellation email Saturday morning. Ok, it is unusual that the order does not appear in my order history, but it wasn't a "real" order anyway.
      I hate it when idiots complain about such things when Amazon has the best retail policies - their price guarrantee and their free returns have saved me a lot of money and woe.
      I remember a little over a year ago I had bought a home theater amplifier on sale. But since I was to move shortly I never opened it until I was settled at the new appartment, bought speakers etc... It turned out to be about 5 months later when I opened it and found out it had a small problem. Amazon takes care of returns during the first month, so I had to go through the manufacturer. The manufacturer asked me to ship the (heavy) item - on my own cost of course, it would then be evaluated and a replacement, if needed, would ship out in 2-3 weeks. I wrote to amazon and politely explained my predicament and whether they would be able to help me, and two days later I had a replacement amp on my doorstep (I have prime so shipping is always 2-days), and a prepaid UPS voucher to send back the original amp on my cost. I have many other examples of good customer service from Amazon, but I believe this was quite indicative.
      The linked article was simply written by someone who is upset he didn't manage to get a freebie from a large retailer. This even happens to be the retailer with the best policies (which do state that price mistakes cannot be honored - duh!). Shame to the ./ editor for picking up this trash.

      --
      Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
    17. Re:Bad Summary. by Caffeine_Coder · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, I was one of the people who tried to get it, and I got a cancellation notice. Perhaps submitted should check their spam folder?


      We regret to inform you that an error caused the following item(s) to
      be displayed at an incorrect price:

      Jazz in Paris

      In accordance with our posted policies on pricing, we are unable to
      offer this item for the incorrectly posted price. Therefore, we have
      cancelled your order for this item.

      At any given time, despite our best efforts, a small number of the
      millions of items on our site may be mispriced. We do, however, verify
      prices as part of our shipping procedures. If we discover that an
      item's correct price is higher than our stated price, we will, at our
      discretion, either contact you for instructions before shipping or
      cancel your order and notify you of such cancellation. This policy is
      posted in the Help section and is accessible through numerous other
      areas of our web site.

      We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

      We value your business and hope that you will give us a chance to
      serve you again in the future.

      Sincerely,

      Customer Service Department
      Amazon.com

      Please note: this e-mail was sent from a notification-only address
      that cannot accept incoming e-mail. Please do not reply to this
      message.

    18. Re:Bad Summary. by baboo_jackal · · Score: 2, Insightful
      No argument there. I think you hit on the key point of this issue, though:

      But in those 4.99 DVD bins at Wal-Mart you never know what your going to find, since there's no list on the side w/what should and shouldn't be in there. so... yeah, I'd argue if it wasn't obviously the wrong thing or the wrong price.
      The example in this article would be like finding, for example, all three seasons of Battlestar Galactica in the $4.99 DVD bin at Walmart. You *know* it doesn't belong there, and you'd have to be a fool or a thief to insist that it did.
  2. External Confirmation? by KingSkippus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A caveat: there is no external confirmation that Amazon did what is claimed here.

    External confirmation? I don't even see any internal confirmation. The one link in the submission goes to the item on Amazon.com's site, at which there is one glowing five-star rated customer review. As far as I can tell, this submitter simply wrote up something that may or may not be a complete fabrication with absolutely zero backing evidence, without even so much as a "here's my blog article about the experience," and somehow it make the front page.

    Where's the screenshot of the item being offered for $31? Where's the printout of the placed order? Who were those customers that Amazon strung along for over a month, and where are they complaining? Was there even more than one? Was there even one? What "highly publicized price guarantee policy?" Are you talking about? This one, which Slate describes as "not something Amazon publicizes?" You are aware that companies don't have to honor prices that are obvious misprints, right? (And that a 75-CD limited edition import CD set being sold for $31 is an obivous misprint, right?)

    Man, next time I have a beef with some company, remind me to completely make some shit up about them and post it as an article here on Slashdot. I'm usually not one to gripe about the job the editorial staff does here, but you guys really drop the ball in a major way on this one. Whether you like Amazon.com or not, with nothing to back it up, this borders on outright libel.

    1. Re:External Confirmation? by phillips321 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well here's the proof from google cache: http://forumpix.co.uk/i.php?I=1202631583
      And here's the corrected mistake afterwards: http://forumpix.co.uk/i.php?I=1202631639

    2. Re:External Confirmation? by pjotrb123 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Even though I think the submitter is totally whining for nothing, the Google cache claim by grandparent is accurate.

      Google query: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=site%3Awww.amazon.com+inurl%3AB00005RSB2+Jazz+import+box
      Locate the URL that is in the summary and then click "Cached" right below it.

      Please check your facts before posting.
      And here's hoping that the Google cache doesn't update too soon or I'll get flamed ;-)

      --
      I liked my next sig a lot better
    3. Re:External Confirmation? by freaker_TuC · · Score: 2, Informative

      Check out Google Cache ?

      The price has definitely been $31 according that cache; so the poster is not babbling out of his neck ...

      --
      --- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..
  3. See the Google cache by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The pricing error seems to be borne out by a cached Google page. http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cache:MFzDQFSwSUkJ:www.amazon.com/Jazz-Paris-Various-Artists/dp/B00005RSB2+Jazz+in+Paris+%5BBOX+SET%5D+%5BIMPORT%5D+%5BLIMITED+EDITION%5D&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us How they handle this error by honoring what they advertise or by using a clause somewhere in their legal text to disavow pricing errors remains to be seen.

  4. My own problems with Amazon by David_Shultz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I haven't ordered anything from Amazon since I made the mistake of ordering textbooks. Several weeks into the course I sent an e-mail asking why I haven't received my books. The response was along the lines of "wait X weeks to make sure they aren't already sent" (I think X was 6 weeks). After waiting and not receiving anything, I wrote back. They replied something along the lines of "we can't do anything if an order was placed more than X weeks ago" (yes, the same X). My order never did arrive and I had to issue a charge back. No explanation or apology was ever given.

    1. Re:My own problems with Amazon by cbart387 · · Score: 2, Informative
      Just a quick question. Did you buy it *from amazon* or *from a merchant*? If from a merchant, it's between the merchant and you at that point.

      Please note: any situations that may arise after an order is submitted must be resolved directly with the seller. here
      --
      Lack of planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on mine.
  5. Kill this article: referral by Solder+Fumes · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not only is there no confirmation of this beyond what some guy wrote in an email to Slashdot, the Amazon link contains a referral ID which should make someone some money if anyone buys the jazz cd set as a result of clicking on the link. This is pretty dishonest and the complaint could be completely false, and has NO place on Slashdot's front page.

  6. completely legal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    i dont feel like burning karma, and someone with a law degree will chime up about the origins of "offer to treat" in the near future and clarify better than I could anyway, but basically until they charge your credit card, they don't have to honor the pricing. until they take your money, there is no contract between the two of you. even if the contract did at some point exist (i.e. they took your money and then failed to deliver on the product) and you sued them, they could probably argue bad faith on your part to nullify the contract (if it's a $500 item, and you bought it for $30, it would be very difficult to explain how you did so in 'good faith belief')

  7. Re:Legality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What's the legality of this? I think in some jurisdictions if you go to a brickNmortar store and they've mispriced something they're legally bound to sell it to you.

    You mean if the stockboy puts the wrong price on an item that's on the shelf, that's the price they the store has to sell it for? I doubt there's a law anywhere in the country that says that. Making mistakes is bad for the store's image but they aren't legally obligated to honor such an error.

    If you're talking about sale prices in advertisements that's something else entirely. Though in most cases a misprint is still a misprint (they may have to put up signage to indicate that, laws vary.)

    In any event, this was a mistake, no harm done, and any mature, reasonable and ethical person wouldn't expect them to honor the mistaken price. The only way this could be considered a story were if Amazon were to try to extort money after the fact or demand returns from customerswho managed to complete the purchase.

  8. Amazon sucks, what's new? by carndearg · · Score: 2, Informative

    So what's new, Amazon has cr@p customer service. In other news, the Pope is Catholic and bears cr@p in the woods.
    I used to buy a lot of stuff from Amazon UK. Then they changed couriers and the new courier had problems delivering to me. No problem I thought, I'll get on to their customer service line and fix it. Trouble is, there was no customer service line for Amazon UK, no customer service email address, just an online form that took you through several steps and then gave an error message. No problem I thought, it must be my minority browser/OS choice. Except it gave the same response on everything I could try it on at every site I tried it, including the obvious win/IE combo.
    Amazon: great when everything goes right, cr@p when it doesn't. I've made my last ever Amazon order.

    1. Re:Amazon sucks, what's new? by xubu_caapn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      i just went to amazon.co.uk --> help --> cancelling an order, then found an email address and phone number. didnt look very hard, did you?

      --
      FYI: I don't know what you guys are talking about half the time.
  9. So??? by EdIII · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Even if this was true, and verified independently by many sources.... so what??

    If you honestly thought it was 30$ to begin with and made the order and were charged for it, then you might have something to complain about it. I still think Amazon would be right to cancel the order and refund your money. So you may have been inconvenienced, but a 20$ discount demonstrates some pretty respectable behavior from Amazon.

    It's a little ridiculous to expect Amazon to eat thousands of dollars in losses over an error on their website. Maybe it's just common sense, or being raised right, but when you think somebody is making a mistake and you profit from it, that is just WRONG. If you knew it was worth 10 times that price and it was a simple mistake, how moral is it to purchase it?

    I have had plenty of stupid teenagers that can not do math correctly give me my change incorrectly. I have even given a 100$ bill to a girl, who gave me 130$ BACK.

    The last time I had a situation like that was at CompUSA. I bought a few Motorola routers and access points and was surprised when all of them rang up for 19.99$ each. I brought it up to the clerk, got the manager, and explained that it looked like a mistake and that the labels actually said a different price. The manager, shockingly, acted like a complete dick and stated that he had no control over the information in the databases and could not do anything for me. They was not any in stock anywhere else, so I ended up getting them for my client anyways.

    The point was that I TRIED to deal with them fairly. On another note, maybe that is why CompUSA went out of business.

    1. Re:So??? by EdIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I understand what you are saying, but the article is a transparent PR job on Amazon, and demonstrably so.

      Bait and Switch does not apply here, and the laws that were created around it certainly do not apply here either.

      There is a little confusion about what constitutes a transaction here. Traditionally, that has always been a face to face, arms length transaction where the 2 parties walk away from each other. I would say that neither party has a right to complain about the price afterwards. Caveat Emptor.

      However, does that really apply to the ability to cancel online orders BEFORE they are fulfilled? IMHO, transactions are not completed until the product is actually received and compensation exchanged. The article makes it clear that the orders were canceled and the products were not shipped. Therefore, the transactions were not completed.

      Although it is not very nice for Amazon to not notify customers of the problem, the 20$ discount demonstrates a good faith effort to compensate the customers for their wasted time.

    2. Re:So??? by EdIII · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You want to argue that there are remedies under the law. Since you, along with another poster, specifically site bait and switch laws let us discuss those particular laws. From http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/guides/baitads-gd.htm

      Sec. 238.0 Bait advertising defined.1

      Bait advertising is an alluring but insincere offer to sell a product or service which the advertiser in truth does not intend or want to sell. Its purpose is to switch consumers from buying the advertised merchandise, in order to sell something else, usually at a higher price or on a basis more advantageous to the advertiser. The primary aim of a bait advertisement is to obtain leads as to persons interested in buying merchandise of the type so advertised.Sec. 238.1 Bait advertisement.

      Amazon clearly intended to sell the product. They were not trying to switch to a different product at the higher price. The mistake could be seen as having the side effect of selling the same product at the higher price.

      No advertisement containing an offer to sell a product should be published when the offer is not a bona fide effort to sell the advertised product. [Guide 1]

      Sec. 238.2 Initial offer.

      (a) No statement or illustration should be used in any advertisement which creates a false impression of the grade, quality, make, value, currency of model, size, color, usability, or origin of the product offered, or which may otherwise misrepresent the product in such a manner that later, on disclosure of the true facts, the purchaser may be switched from the advertised product to another.

      (b) Even though the true facts are subsequently made known to the buyer, the law is violated if the first contact or interview is secured by deception. [Guide 2]

      They advertised the exact same product before and after the price change. No differences in quality, make, value, etc. Just a difference in price. I truly don't think that databases errors can be seen as deceptive acts. Deception is a characterization of a behavior. Was Amazon truly, in a premeditated fashion, deceiving the consumer with an error in their database? I would say that is very hard to prove, and on the basis of a single product error, especially given the volume of transactions that Amazon conducts.

      Sec. 238.3 Discouragement of purchase of advertised merchandise.

      No act or practice should be engaged in by an advertiser to discourage the purchase of the advertised merchandise as part of a bait scheme to sell other merchandise. Among acts or practices which will be considered in determining if an advertisement is a bona fide offer are:

      (a) The refusal to show, demonstrate, or sell the product offered in accordance with the terms of the offer,

      (b) The disparagement by acts or words of the advertised product or the disparagement of the guarantee, credit terms, availability of service, repairs or parts, or in any other respect, in connection with it,

      (c) The failure to have available at all outlets listed in the advertisement a sufficient quantity of the advertised product to meet reasonably anticipated demands, unless the advertisement clearly and adequately discloses that supply is limited and/or the merchandise is available only at designated outlets,

      (d) The refusal to take orders for the advertised merchandise to be delivered within a reasonable period of time,

      (e) The showing or demonstrating of a product which is defective, unusable or impractical for the purpose represented or implied in the advertisement,

      (f) Use of a sales plan or method of compensation for salesmen or penalizing salesmen, designed to prevent or discourage them from selling the

  10. riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and the customer was not informed about it
    according to the oh-so-thorough summary that has ZERO links (except for one to amazon's own site with the $499 price). this summary smells a lot like someone who ordered the "$30" set from amazon in bad faith, hoping they wouldn't notice the mistake and $500 worth of CDs would show up a few weeks later. when the order was cancelled, off to slashdot they ran, hoping to stir up some sentiment against amazon. Now, maybe Amazon really DIDNT notify the customer(s) in this case, but in other publicised examples (as well as anecdotally in the grandparentpost) they *DID* do so.. so without evidence that they violated their own policy (which, by the way, is just a policy.. until they charge your credit card no contract exists), they're entitled to the benefit of the doubt.
    1. Re:riiiight by yog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've spend thousands of dollars at Amazon over the past eleven years. One time I received a faulty Brother printer which Amazon promptly replaced, no questions asked, the new one sent in advance, trusting me to return the old one once I received the prepaid shipping sticker. (Brother's customer support was completely useless, which is why I'll never buy Brother again, but that's another story.)

      Not once have I ever experienced a pricing problem or other anomaly that might mar my buying experience. I have also taken advantage of Amo's easy approach to selling my stuff back to others and have unloaded many textbooks and DVDs over the years.

      In short, Amazon for me represents the most successful of the new online retailers; they have won my trust and admiration, no easy feat, and so I find this Slashdot story to be questionable at best. I am willing to believe that such a mistake occurred, but without any links or independent confirmation of the accusations it really sounds more like a disgruntled customer out to hurt them as much as possible. Given my own experience and that of many friends and associates over the years I would be surprised if this were anything more than a blip.

      --
      it's = "it is"; its = possessive. E.g., it's flapping its wings.
  11. Amazon's just fine here... by ChePibe · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm a law student... just a student... NOT a lawyer, and certainly not your lawyer, so nothing here is legal advice, period. I am not qualified to give legal advice, so I'm not giving it and cannot, in fact, even do so. Speak to a qualified professional about these matters, NOT ME.

    (This is all assuming, of course, that there is an actual problem here.)

    If I'm remembering first year contracts properly, then there's no problem here with Amazon refusing to sell at the price it listed.

    A contract must have a few things to come into existence, generally: offer, acceptance, consideration.

    Advertisements and catalog listings suffer from an "over-subscription problem" and are not considered firm offers themselves and, therefore, cannot simply be "accepted" by a consumer who makes an order. Ads are generally treated as invitations to deal unless they require something special on top of just showing up (i.e. being the first in line). The consumer's order, however, is considered an offer, which can be rejected by the seller by either refusing to provide goods and refunding money in a timely fashion or refusing to accept the money in the first place. This is done to protect merchants from themselves (people shouldn't be able to walk away with huge windfalls because a $5.00/hr clerk forgot a zero) and to protect their advertisers from them (newspapers shouldn't be held accountable for giving people windfalls for much the same reason). It's just good public policy, and prevents the games of "gotcha".

    I see why some people are whining, but from a legal standpoint (again, I am not providing legal advice and I'm only a student - I could be 100% wrong on this and would welcome correction), Amazon has done nothing wrong in simply deleting the orders and refunding any money already sent.

  12. Probably happens a lot by tiger32kw · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This probably happens a good amount of time. Otherwise they would most likely take this singular loss to maintain their reputation. No big deal really (How is this news).

  13. I don't see anything out of the ordinary here... by Monsterdog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I used to be on a board that tracked amazon pricing errors -- picked up quite a few items for next to nothing that way. They used to play along and make good on such orders, but it got to the point where it was costing them so much and causing such disruptiveness that they changed the policy, and mispriced orders now are usually canceled. That's been in effect for at least the last five years. They don't always notify the buyer -- which I think is a customer service issue where people fall through the cracks -- and they only rarely offer a make-nice like a gift certificate.

  14. New Slashdot Effect by bagsc · · Score: 5, Funny

    People who viewed "Jazz in Paris" bought:
    Jazz in Paris 1%
    Linux in a Nutshell 55%
    Understanding the Linux Kernel 12%
    Running Weblogs with Slash 7%

    --
    http://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
  15. Re:Legality? by jacksonj04 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    [Citation Needed]

    --
    How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
  16. Re:Let's do the math... by BattleApple · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Even if only $1,064 people ordered this CD Box Set...
    And how exactly do you come up with these monetary values you place on humans?
  17. Re:so obvious by Firas+Zirie · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Then they should take as a lesson and improve their site.

    Product information -including price- is most likely manually entered into their database. Why do you think Amazon should swallow thousands of dollars worth of losses over a typo?

    No, THEY MADE A MISTAKE. Nothing wrong about it, and the converse is equally true: if you buy a cd set from Amazon priced at $400 when another site has it priced at $30, it's your own damn fault for not checking the price.

    Wow, is the idea of screwing the corporations so tempting to you that any shred of morals is lost? I don't think you would be saying what you are saying if any of this involved your money now would you?

    And while we're on the subject of right and wrong, Ms. Manners, what about the retailer trying to sweep their mistake under the rug instead of manning up and admitting their mistake?

    I'm afraid I can't disagree with you there, that is exactly what they should do.

  18. Re:Legality? by philipgar · · Score: 2, Informative
    Actually, from the link you gave us:

    15. What if an item is marked the wrong price and the clerk catches it before I pay; am I entitled to buy the item at the price marked?

    This is a fact-specific question best answered by a court. A store may not knowingly charge or attempt to charge a price higher than the price marked on the item. MCL 445.354. Therefore, the consumer may have a claim if the store will not sell the item at the price marked. However, the consumer may face obstacles convincing a court that the store knowingly charged the higher price when the pricing mistake is not intentional and will result in an obvious windfall to the consumer.
    While this doesn't exactly say that the store can change the price, the law basically allows it, in particular when the pricing mistake was unintentional. In particular, this protects stores from swapping tags on items and try and call it the stores mistake. Consumers are not given a right to buy goods at a low price if the store makes a mistake and corrects it before the transaction has completed.

    Phil
  19. Re:Legality? by jamesbulman · · Score: 2, Informative
    This point from the website you mention would seem to apply to this case:

    15. What if an item is marked the wrong price and the clerk catches it before I pay; am I entitled to buy the item at the price marked?

    This is a fact-specific question best answered by a court. A store may not knowingly charge or attempt to charge a price higher than the price marked on the item. MCL 445.354. Therefore, the consumer may have a claim if the store will not sell the item at the price marked. However, the consumer may face obstacles convincing a court that the store knowingly charged the higher price when the pricing mistake is not intentional and will result in an obvious windfall to the consumer.

    My personal take is that unless money has changed hands (in this case it hadn't) the store shouldn't be forced to honour an obvious mistake, especially as in this case the guy was acting in bad faith as he knew that the item was worth > 10x the listed price.
  20. Re:Wasnt That The Point? by somersault · · Score: 2, Funny

    If you live in Conspiracy World, yes they did. But there's no way of proving it.

    --
    which is totally what she said
  21. Re:Legality? by rudy_wayne · · Score: 2, Informative

    You're wrong. The store has to sell it for the price on the shelf. Most (all?) states have consumer protection laws in place where if the price differs at the register, you get the price on the shelf plus a bit extra (or if it is a small value item, it's free) For example... http://www.michigan.gov/ag/0,1607,7-164-34739_20942-134114--,00.html
    Well, unfortunately, you didn't read the whole law. Here's the relevant portion from the Q&A section about the Michigan law (and I suspect that all states have a similar clause). Emphasis added is mine

    What if an item is marked the wrong price and the clerk catches it before I pay; am I entitled to buy the item at the price marked?

    This is a fact-specific question best answered by a court. A store may not knowingly charge or attempt to charge a price higher than the price marked on the item. MCL 445.354. Therefore, the consumer may have a claim if the store will not sell the item at the price marked. However, the consumer may face obstacles convincing a court that the store knowingly charged the higher price when the pricing mistake is not intentional and will result in an obvious windfall to the consumer.

  22. Happens Every Week by I'll+Provide+The+War · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Seriously. Visit SlickDeals or FatWallet and you will see that there is a thread for every single pricing mistake, followed shortly by posters bragging about ordering the maximum amount of product allowed. 99% of the time the orders are canceled.

  23. Re:It's not that simple by EdIII · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Let me respond, but before that let me be clear about what I believe Amazon did FTA:

    1) Amazon offered a product for sale at a price less then 1/10th of the "real" price. 2) Amazon took orders from customers. These orders constituted an offer to purchase at the stated price, IMO. 3) Amazon did not fulfill, or ship the products. 4) Amazon did not communicate anything to the customers. 5) Amazon canceled the orders.

    Okay, let's apply your thinking elsewhere. Like some of those sleazy online camera stores, advertising very attractive camera prices. They start accepting orders for new cameras, wait a week or two, then start calling customers back and saying they made a mistake and offering them a different model for slightly more. The dealer calls it an honest mistake...one they repeat regularly.

    You are talking about behaviors that are clearly covered under Bait and Switch laws. My thinking does not apply to them, nor did I claim it to be so. I do not believe that Amazon pulled a Bait and Switch game here.

    The only way companies will exercise reasonable care in advertising is if they're held accountable for what they advertise. Cell phone, cable companies, airlines, rental car companies, the camera stores mentioned above and hotels are getting to the point their advertised prices are fantasy. Where's the accountability?

    Amazon does not advertise their products. Unless this specific item appears in banner pages on other websites, it is not an advertisement. It is merely an advanced interactive product listing. I wholeheartedly believe that companies need to exercise reasonable care in advertising and be held accountable for those advertisements. I just don't think that a product listing page on a website constitutes advertisement in the traditional sense. What is reasonable care? No system can be perfect, and unless you can demonstrate that this is a pervasive problem within Amazon's systems I would propose they are taking "reasonable care" in the design, implementation, and review of their information systems. I am a database designer, so I can tell you that no system is perfect, but I certainly work very hard to reduce or outright eliminate errors like this.

    What we definitely don't need now is a corporate apologists blaming the victim

    I actually take offense to that, since it seems to be directed towards me. I am very pro-consumer, and I am as certainly fed up with the amount of bull in this country. Stepping back from the situation and evaluating it logically, rationally, and impartially, is not the actions of an apologist.

    I am stating that there is a distinction between this specific act and the general behavior of bait and switch companies. You can read my other post where I cite Bait and Switch guidelines from the FCC and use them on the aforementioned actions of Amazon. I also stated certain moral implications of the behaviors being performed FTA, and the overall tone of the article being a poor PR job on Amazon. If we are going to demonize Amazon for something, let's pick a better example with clearer evidence.

    blaming the victim

    Victims? Who? Where?

    If any of those customers honestly thought a boxed CD set of Jazz with what looks like to be 30-40 cds was really 30$, then they were inconvenienced and had their time wasted. They are certainly not victims for that alone. Amazon did not offer them more products, different terms, or prolong any more pain. They simply canceled the transactions. They way they did left MUCH to be desired. I DO NOT blame these people.

    For those customers that knew the product was being offered at the incorrect price and ordered it anyways, I stated that they are being immoral doing so. I do blame them. I will continue to blame them. They tried taking advantage of Amazon, and do not deserve a "pass" sim

  24. Hold up by Travoltus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Then they should take as a lesson and improve their site.


    Product information -including price- is most likely manually entered into their database. Why do you think Amazon should swallow thousands of dollars worth of losses over a typo?


    No, THEY MADE A MISTAKE. Nothing wrong about it, and the converse is equally true: if you buy a cd set from Amazon priced at $400 when another site has it priced at $30, it's your own damn fault for not checking the price.


    Wow, is the idea of screwing the corporations so tempting to you that any shred of morals is lost? I don't think you would be saying what you are saying if any of this involved your money now would you?

    So basically you're saying people should not be held responsible for their mistakes.

    Hey, according to you, I can price anything the way I want, and if I decide the price is too low today, cancel the order! Now that's morality, at least on planet Firias Zirie.
    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
  25. Cancellation email by Ecuador · · Score: 4, Informative

    Oh, and in case there is doubt about the cancellation email, this is what I got:

    Greetings from Amazon.com.

    We regret to inform you that an error caused the following item(s) to
    be displayed at an incorrect price:

    Jazz in Paris

    In accordance with our posted policies on pricing, we are unable to
    offer this item for the incorrectly posted price. Therefore, we have
    cancelled your order for this item.

    At any given time, despite our best efforts, a small number of the
    millions of items on our site may be mispriced. We do, however, verify
    prices as part of our shipping procedures. If we discover that an
    item's correct price is higher than our stated price, we will, at our
    discretion, either contact you for instructions before shipping or
    cancel your order and notify you of such cancellation. This policy is
    posted in the Help section and is accessible through numerous other
    areas of our web site.

    We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

    We value your business and hope that you will give us a chance to
    serve you again in the future.

    Sincerely,

    Customer Service Department
    Amazon.com

    Please note: this e-mail was sent from a notification-only address
    that cannot accept incoming e-mail. Please do not reply to this
    message.

    --
    Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
  26. Re:I don't see anything out of the ordinary here.. by STrinity · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's worse than that. Nowadays they correct the price on their website, ship the product out, and then they submit fraudulent charges using the credit card info they have on file in order to "make up the difference."
    In the case you're citing, there was never an error with the prices listed on Amazon. They advertised a buy-one-get-one-free sale, but a glitch in the system caused the cheaper price to be deducted twice -- which meant that if someone bought two items of the same price, they were both free. The advertised price was right -- the price at checkout was wrong. The "fraudulent charges" weren't based on Amazon changing prices -- it was Amazon charging the price they had actually advertised.

    Everyone in that thread knew they were taking advantage of a mistake. There's one guy in that thread who ordered every item in the sale -- over a thousand dollars worth of DVDs -- paired in such a way that it was all free. I don't think he even had to pay shipping. Yes, Amazon screwed up by not canceling the orders when they corrected the glitch, but apart from the first person to notice the problem, everyone on that thread knew they were taking advantage of a programming error. As such, I have a hard time feeling sorry for them.
    --
    Les Miserables Volume 1 now up with my reading of
  27. It's still available by jdc180 · · Score: 3, Informative
  28. Bad Faith Purchase by linuxtweaker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I hate to side with a corporation, but in this matter I do have to agree with Amazon:

    This box set has been around since 2003. It's not something that a casual music listener purchases. It's something that will attract musicologists, historians, and hard core jazz fans.

    The fact that Amazon managed to lay their hands on three copies of this set to sell is amazing! I searched for it a few years ago, and only found one or two new copies of it. The used copies that were on the market were going for $600 or more.

    To be honest, I am totally baffled by what the problem is here? Amazon has a cancellation policy if an item is priced incorrectly. At least one person has posted a notice they received of the cancellation.

    Is it wrong for a company to not get raped for $1500? Is it wrong for them to not honor a bad faith sale? Is it wrong for them to correct an error in their system? (How many errors have they corrected in customer's favor?)

    Back to my previous perusal of this set: I wanted this set, but I knew that I couldn't afford to spend $500 on any CD collection, despite the fact that it is an EXCELLENT set. My solution was to scrounge hard and find the four 3-disc box sets. They provided an excellent overview of the material in the larger set, and satisfied my hunger for the bigger set. Alas, my quick search of Froogle didn't turn up many copies of them (however, if memory recalls, they were difficult to find the first time around - I think I had to search by the individual box titles).

    Honestly, the author of this piece just needs to suck it up. If he really wants the set (and, even at $500 it is still an EXCELLENT bargain - only $6.67 per disc!) then buy it at the proper price. If he really doesn't want to pay the $500, then try to find the other sets, or look elsewhere.

    --
    --- Faster moments spread tales of change within the sound.