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Amazon Is Kicking All Unauthorized Apple Refurbishers Off the Site (vice.com)

In a new agreement between tech giants Amazon and Apple, shoppers will soon see a selection of the latest Apple products on Amazon.com. This is not good news for everyone. Motherboard: John Bumstead is a computer refurbisher who, every year, saves thousands of laptops from the shredder. He buys MacBooks en masse from electronics recyclers, fixes them, then sells them on Amazon Marketplace or wholesales them to vendors who do the same. Friday morning, Bumstead got an email from Amazon informing him that he'd no longer be allowed to sell Apple computers on the platform, thanks to a new agreement between Apple and Amazon that will only allow "authorized resellers" to sell Apple products.

"As part of a new agreement with Apple, we are working with a select group of authorized resellers to offer an expanded selection of Apple and Beats products, including new releases, in Amazon's stores," the email says. "You are receiving this message because you are currently selling, or have previously sold, Apple or Beats products. Your existing offers for those products will soon be removed from Amazon's online store in the United States. Please contact Apple if you would like to apply to become an authorized reseller on Amazon." As the email notes, this is part of a new agreement between two of the largest companies in the world that will allow Amazon to sell new Apple products around the world; in exchange, Amazon agreed to let Apple pick-and-choose who is allowed to sell Apple products on the site.

4 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Yet..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Where are they getting your product?

    If they're stealing it, then report that to the police.

    If you're selling it to someone, who then sells it to someone else, you get no say about that. Once you sell it to party 1, it is theirs, and they are able to sell it to party 2 if they want.

  2. Re: No monopoly here. by mSparks43 · · Score: 5, Informative

    what am i talking about?
    The fact you can buy tons of counterfeit goods from amazon
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/w...

    but now not legitimately refurbished apple products.

  3. Re:No monopoly here. by tlhIngan · · Score: 4, Informative

    Amazon has a massive logistics infrastructure that sellers can take advantage of.

    And still do. Lots of people use Amazon Logistics. You can be someone to ship via Amazon but not sell anything via Amazon. You just ship your product to Amazon, and Amazon warehouses it and ships it. All you have to do is tell Amazon where to ship your item to.

    I've bought tons of stuff from eBay that were drop-shipped by Amazon in the end (complete with smile boxes). They didn't have Amazon on the label,

    The only thing happening here is that Amazon isn't letting refurbishers sell on Amazon. They're still free to use their logistics services.

    And yes, Amazon offers a full suite of services, including customs clearance for product. If it's new product, it needs to be palletized and labelled in a special way before Amazon will break it down into individual units.

  4. Re:No monopoly here. by Aighearach · · Score: 4, Informative

    called a cartel.

    The word you were looking for was "strategic partnership."

    A cartel is a horizontal partnership designed to fix prices or prevent access horizontally. Amazon is not a cell phone manufacturer, and this relationship doesn't change the prices of cell phones. It also doesn't prevent access by other cell phone manufacturers. So it isn't close to a cartel.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    A strategic partnership can be horizontal or vertical. Here, it is vertical; it is between the supplier of a good, and a retailer. While horizontal partnerships have to tread carefully around anti-trust law, vertical partnerships have very little exposure to that; they only have exposure when a monopoly is used to force some action that harms consumers by raising prices. Amazon is not a monopoly of any market, they're only a market leader; and here they're not using their position to force Apple to do anything. It is the opposite; Apple is such a big presence in the cell phone market that they finally were able to get Amazon to do what they wanted!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    As long as the cell phone carriers are all selling phones directly to customers, and most cell phones are being sold that way, claiming some sort of "monopoly" by a retailer would get laughed out of court.