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That's what I think. My only other thought is Amazon/Walmart might figure they can make more selling their own products rather than fees off 3rd party sellers. With the increased cost of doing business that has exploded over the past few years they might figure there is less overhead managing the inventory of thousands of 3rd party sellers. Probably a combination of things like this.
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The movement with the 3d printed train is pretty cool though. I guess it at least has that going for it.
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That is what I am not getting. This does not seem like something this current government would care about at all. I feel they would tend to be way in the opposite direction. The only thing I can think is that the larger Toy companies are pressuring this to decrease sales of older toys and increase sales of newer toys for them. Either that or some cabal of insurance companies or testing companies had some sort of pressure or influence applied.
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Wonder where all this special compliance regulation is coming from. This administration is supposed to be anti-regulation. Did'nt they de-regulate CFPB. I guess they don't care about CSPC
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Walmart joins the fun but so far doesnt seem to have actually affected my listings. Maybe lego is excluded hopefully.
- Yesterday
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Since when we have to weigh every single Lego set? Are we selling cokes or toys?
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Winter village, seasonal sets, and advent calendars - general discussion
TheOrcKing replied to Ed Mack's topic in Seasonal
Here around the 2:10 timestamp is a good look at the 3D printed tiny train and its functions. This would mark the first widely available set to include such an element while technically being LEGO's fourth official 3D printed piece I believe. 1st was a drafting table machine arm from a LEGO Tour 2019 set (New Elementary article with actual photos), 2nd a toy duck given as a gift with purchase to LEGO House visitors, third a pogo stick for backers of The Secret Life of LEGO book, and now this toy train. After looking back at how incredibly niche & rather sparse the releases of 3D printed elements LEGO has attempted thus far, I am not too worried of its inclusion here. I do ponder upon what this may entail going forward of course. -
Channel Tang Brick Studio has quite a few armies.
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This is why I weigh every set I purchase. Since I don't usually purchase just 1 of anything, it's easy to know if they don't weigh the same.
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Curious if you visited Amazon's procured third party list for testing? Most of the approved providers are outside of the US. Some don't even test children's toys. Many of the sites give limited information and some are flagged as not secure, lol. I feel for 'Bob' from customer service who works for one of these companies and is probably used to a few inquires a week.
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Coincidentally, a different buyer complained about missing pieces and I received a email from amazon saying they are launching an ASIN investigation. Has anyone else had this? I'm wondering what the timeline is and what has happened for other people. If they ask me for invoices I am toast...
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Kroger: Lego gift card $200 for $225. Remember to clip the 4x points coupon on gift card purchases before. https://giftcards.kroger.com/deal/lego-egift-24
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Under the current circumstances and lack of clear future why would you focus on anything?
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ah if so, all Lego technically can be built by less than 12. Its just a marketing ploy by lego
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Just to be clear...Amazon did specify some things that are intended for 12+ that still look like children's toys are still subject to documentation if they decide that. I know that most McFarlane, NECA, Sideshow/Hot Toys, Mezco, Super 7, etc. are sold as and marketed for adults and packaged as such. Most of them still very much look like toys/action figures. I would love for all those to be exempt, but Amazon is clearly run by robots and AI and who knows how they will interpret things going forward. I would be ecstatic if even half my inventory survives the purge.
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Very informative. So the strategy is to focus on 12+ sets now. Hmmmmm....
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They didn't say a deadline. Everything will be ASIN based and will come in waves with different deadlines is the way I understood it. They also said if a toy has any "playability" it would not be excluded from the under 12 testing. Lego sets 12+ would not require testing Of course this comes right after the listing violation debacle where I still have 3500 units stranded. I have another week or so before auto-removal and my front porch looks like Santa's sleigh exploded.
- Last week
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Hes very into Walmart these days. But I saw a similar warning on my walmart account today regarding toy certificates...
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I wanted to but forgot to join. Did they say the deadline date?
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Anyone else join the Toy compliance webinar today? I did and I'm 99% sure resellers are done on Amazon. I'm just waiting for the 3000+ compliance request that should hit in the next couple of days. And at that point, it's gonna be a race to the bottom until the due date. THEN... after all the genuine Lego listings are gone... Amazon will be over taken with "Compatible with Lego" listings. It's not feasible to test Lego products because every color and every plastic has to be tested. I once got a pallet of 9516's examined by CPSC and they told me I had to supply testing records. Not just the results of the test (these can be found on the Lego compliance website) but also the testing methods used and details of the test. Of course Lego doesn't supply this (I even begged Lego) and after getting quotes from multiple approved labs ($15,000-$20,000 per lego set) ... my only option was to sign it over to CBP to be destroyed. I wish I knew what "Secret Marketplace" the Brick Bucks guy is talking about
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yup, thats the absurdity of it. even after 100% refund you are still at the whim and mercy of some petty karen. But at least you've done all you can do..... thats my philosophy.
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The logic is sound, but that doesn’t guarantee the customer won’t leave negative feedback — which could then be picked up by bots systems and result in a case being opened.
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It's not worth it based on what just happened to me. One impatient customer that doesn't like your response can jeopardize you're entire account. I'd rather devote .x% of my sales as refunds as "account protection" costs. A bit like the mafia protection costs of old Better to be wrong with amazon selling privileges than right with none, funds and inventory confiscated. I know FAR too many ppl (not lego sellers) that have lost 6/7 digit businesses for the infamous section 3 complaints. btw this was a FBA (I'm 100% FBA) sale that the customer nonetheless messaged me about)
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You never defend 100%. You ask for it back then your refund
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