I have done another video on this.
It is not the really tedious one hour 45 minute video, or even the heavily edited 28 minute video.
It is the 9 minute summary - enjoy.
This is extracted subtitles, not perfect, but a good start...
Hi. Well, firstly, for those that have
been following, my cold has nearly
cleared up, but I do apologize that I
will almost certainly end up coughing at
some point during this.
Also, I'm letting you know I'm sparing
you from a really tedious video.
I had a chat, online chat with Amazon
yesterday and I recorded it. I recorded
the chat window. I recorded me and audio
and so on and put it all together and
edited an hour and 45 minutes of online
chat down to 28 minutes. That took me a
while
and then I decided no, that was actually
too tedious, too boring. Even though it
was meant to sort of highlight how
tedious and boring it is dealing with
Amazon, I decided no, even that was too
tedious. It was mostly me typing and you
can see in the chat window and I didn't
even narrate what I was typing. So it
was interspersed with some rants but
that was it. So
I've spared you that but I thought I'd
do a summary. So
I've mentioned the issue with Amazon.
It's very straightforward. We've been
selling product for years. It's called
Facin. It works with Din air
controllers. Hence the similar name.
And Amazon got a letter from Dacin
saying it's bit trademark. Amazon pulled
the listing froze 200 stock that we had
in Amazon and we've been battling with
them for months now.
Last month, December the 3rd,
went around circles with them. They kept
saying, "Well, you need to to appeal." I
said, "Well, we've been through the
appeal and you just keep asking for more
information. There is no resolution.
We've given up appealing. The matter's
now closed. We're not going to appeal
anymore. Send them back." And the
comment then was, "Well, we're holding
them for 36 days." Now, I did suggest
that they pay me rent for that, but they
didn't understand that. Holding them for
36 days, but after 36 days, you can have
them back. And it was very clear on
that.
So, I got pissed off,
but I decided I'll play their game. They
clearly said I'll have them back in 36
days.
It's been about 40 days now. So I
chatted with them yesterday and this was
the hour and 45 minute chat and it's
like speaking to a brick wall.
The the person I'm speaking to just
doesn't understand the concept. He's
saying well you need to appeal. I said
tried appealing. We've given up on that.
We need to send these documents. But
there aren't any documents to send.
They're not going to send any documents.
Just send them back.
At one point he's like well if you send
the documents how can we send them back?
And he's sort of like put them in a box
with our address on them. Put them in
the post. It's not complicated.
But he just, you know, he's got a mental
block with the whole concept that they
can send them back. They don't need me
to send documents or appeals to send
them back. They can do it. It is
physically possible for them to do it.
But no, it just that didn't that thought
didn't enter his head. It was a very
frustrating hour and 45 minutes and very
boring. As I said,
the summary of the call finally came in.
Um, and the email came up and said,
"Well, you've still got to send some
documents in." Basically, they're saying
they're going to hold them. In fact, at
one point, they even suggested they
might destroy them.
And to be clear, the whole Amazon
process for this is for handling fake
merchandise. So, if I was selling
trainers that had Mike instead of Nike
on them, then I can understand that
they're fake products and they want to
do something about it and take them off
the market. Although, I'm not really
sure they should be entitled to destroy
them without court order.
But this is not what's happening. These
are not fake DIN products. DIN don't
make development boards. They do make a
Wi-Fi adapter, but it doesn't look at
anything like this or work in the same
way. So, this isn't a fake DIN product
with a similar name to Fool People. It's
a different product and and their
process doesn't really get up to that in
the first place. So given that they're
basically trying to tackle potentially
fake products, their process is wanting
documents like the invoice for where I
got it, what supplier I got it from. So
if I had a supplier that said, "Yes,
this is genuine DIN um Wi-Fi
controllers, then maybe I'd get
somewhere." Or if I had, you know, if I
bought them from DIN. The problem is
we're not claiming that they're DIN. So
we don't have an invoice from a supplier
that says that they're genuine DIN.
Also, we made them. So, we don't have an
invoice for the splat. I mean, I've got
an invoice for the bare circuit boards,
but that's that's not the final product.
And they just argued up for that. Their
appeals process seems to lack a couple
of obvious steps. One is it's not a
breach of trademark. It's not a concept
they seem to understand. The other is
okay, it's a potential breach of
trademark. We're not saying it's breach
of trademark. Obviously, we're not
conceding that, especially as you might
destroy the goods, but it's a potential
VA trademark. So, we're prepared to pull
the products, withdraw the products from
sale, um, get them back, rebrand them,
so there's no confusion, there's no
there's no ambiguity. And again, that's
not an avenue they understand. I had a
chat today
and actually someone slightly more
helpful, although he did admit that
often they can't actually do anything to
fix problems. He has actually managed to
escalate it to a specialist team.
And the reason we got somewhere, I
think, is because the the summary from
previous chat wanted five things from
me. And these five things are invoices
and receipts, pricing information may be
removed, supplier information, name,
phone, number, address, and website.
Item description and quantities, import
or export documents, and documentation
showing that your fake products do not
infringe on the day trademark.
And I was able to basically tackle all
five points preemptively in the chat.
So when it comes to invoice and
receipts, there is no invoice of
receipt. We make these. When it comes to
supplier information, there is no
supplier. We make these. When it comes
to item description and quantities,
well, you know the item description and
how many you have. When it comes to
import and export documentations, well,
we make these. We didn't import or
export them.
documentation showing your faking
products do not infringe trademark.
Well, my answer there is what
documentation could we provide that
faking does not infringe other than the
daking trademark which states the
letters D, A, I, K, I, and N and not the
letters F I, A, A, I, K, I, and N. So, I
preemptively answered all five points.
So, that stock answer is not going to
work this time. And I actually got
through to someone who seemed to grasp
that concept.
Now obviously
I had to explain it's not a fake puppet
um and a few other things but basically
he's transferred it to a specialized
team
but the one other thing I have said is
if it helps if you choose not to return
them then this will result in a county
court claim to challenge your actions
and policy in front of a judge. This is
the course you are taking if you choose
not to return them. As you know, there
has been no legal decision in a court to
declare this product is a beach.
And it does not use the actual word day.
So, it's not automatically a beach. It
needs a legal decision.
It could only be decided by a court, not
by Amazon.
So, that's all been passed through to
them. So, we're hoping maybe, just
possibly this time, it'll get through to
a person who's not completely brain dead
and can actually answer it. Otherwise,
it will be a county court claim.
It may well be that Amazon terms and
conditions and policies clearly state
they can withhold goods and destroy them
at a whim like this. But even if it
does, I'd like to see that in front of a
judge. A judge may well say that that
policy and that contract is not a valid
thing.
Um, I mean these are quite cheap, but
this could be really expensive goods, a
lot of stock and purely on the
allegation of a trademark infringement.
They are holding them and threatening to
destroy them without any actual decision
or court order.
I'd like to see that in front of a
county court judge just to see what they
say and and it will be worth the I don't
know 50 quid or whatever it cost to do
that.
So, and Amazon probably won't want to
sit in a county court and defend their
retention or destruction of my property.
So, we will see.
So, fingers crossed. But yes, this is
how impossible Amazon are to deal with
on a day-to-day basis.
Good luck if you want to deal with
Amazon. And sadly, they're in such a
monopolistic position that it's hard not
to.
Thank you.
been following, my cold has nearly
cleared up, but I do apologize that I
will almost certainly end up coughing at
some point during this.
Also, I'm letting you know I'm sparing
you from a really tedious video.
I had a chat, online chat with Amazon
yesterday and I recorded it. I recorded
the chat window. I recorded me and audio
and so on and put it all together and
edited an hour and 45 minutes of online
chat down to 28 minutes. That took me a
while
and then I decided no, that was actually
too tedious, too boring. Even though it
was meant to sort of highlight how
tedious and boring it is dealing with
Amazon, I decided no, even that was too
tedious. It was mostly me typing and you
can see in the chat window and I didn't
even narrate what I was typing. So it
was interspersed with some rants but
that was it. So
I've spared you that but I thought I'd
do a summary. So
I've mentioned the issue with Amazon.
It's very straightforward. We've been
selling product for years. It's called
Facin. It works with Din air
controllers. Hence the similar name.
And Amazon got a letter from Dacin
saying it's bit trademark. Amazon pulled
the listing froze 200 stock that we had
in Amazon and we've been battling with
them for months now.
Last month, December the 3rd,
went around circles with them. They kept
saying, "Well, you need to to appeal." I
said, "Well, we've been through the
appeal and you just keep asking for more
information. There is no resolution.
We've given up appealing. The matter's
now closed. We're not going to appeal
anymore. Send them back." And the
comment then was, "Well, we're holding
them for 36 days." Now, I did suggest
that they pay me rent for that, but they
didn't understand that. Holding them for
36 days, but after 36 days, you can have
them back. And it was very clear on
that.
So, I got pissed off,
but I decided I'll play their game. They
clearly said I'll have them back in 36
days.
It's been about 40 days now. So I
chatted with them yesterday and this was
the hour and 45 minute chat and it's
like speaking to a brick wall.
The the person I'm speaking to just
doesn't understand the concept. He's
saying well you need to appeal. I said
tried appealing. We've given up on that.
We need to send these documents. But
there aren't any documents to send.
They're not going to send any documents.
Just send them back.
At one point he's like well if you send
the documents how can we send them back?
And he's sort of like put them in a box
with our address on them. Put them in
the post. It's not complicated.
But he just, you know, he's got a mental
block with the whole concept that they
can send them back. They don't need me
to send documents or appeals to send
them back. They can do it. It is
physically possible for them to do it.
But no, it just that didn't that thought
didn't enter his head. It was a very
frustrating hour and 45 minutes and very
boring. As I said,
the summary of the call finally came in.
Um, and the email came up and said,
"Well, you've still got to send some
documents in." Basically, they're saying
they're going to hold them. In fact, at
one point, they even suggested they
might destroy them.
And to be clear, the whole Amazon
process for this is for handling fake
merchandise. So, if I was selling
trainers that had Mike instead of Nike
on them, then I can understand that
they're fake products and they want to
do something about it and take them off
the market. Although, I'm not really
sure they should be entitled to destroy
them without court order.
But this is not what's happening. These
are not fake DIN products. DIN don't
make development boards. They do make a
Wi-Fi adapter, but it doesn't look at
anything like this or work in the same
way. So, this isn't a fake DIN product
with a similar name to Fool People. It's
a different product and and their
process doesn't really get up to that in
the first place. So given that they're
basically trying to tackle potentially
fake products, their process is wanting
documents like the invoice for where I
got it, what supplier I got it from. So
if I had a supplier that said, "Yes,
this is genuine DIN um Wi-Fi
controllers, then maybe I'd get
somewhere." Or if I had, you know, if I
bought them from DIN. The problem is
we're not claiming that they're DIN. So
we don't have an invoice from a supplier
that says that they're genuine DIN.
Also, we made them. So, we don't have an
invoice for the splat. I mean, I've got
an invoice for the bare circuit boards,
but that's that's not the final product.
And they just argued up for that. Their
appeals process seems to lack a couple
of obvious steps. One is it's not a
breach of trademark. It's not a concept
they seem to understand. The other is
okay, it's a potential breach of
trademark. We're not saying it's breach
of trademark. Obviously, we're not
conceding that, especially as you might
destroy the goods, but it's a potential
VA trademark. So, we're prepared to pull
the products, withdraw the products from
sale, um, get them back, rebrand them,
so there's no confusion, there's no
there's no ambiguity. And again, that's
not an avenue they understand. I had a
chat today
and actually someone slightly more
helpful, although he did admit that
often they can't actually do anything to
fix problems. He has actually managed to
escalate it to a specialist team.
And the reason we got somewhere, I
think, is because the the summary from
previous chat wanted five things from
me. And these five things are invoices
and receipts, pricing information may be
removed, supplier information, name,
phone, number, address, and website.
Item description and quantities, import
or export documents, and documentation
showing that your fake products do not
infringe on the day trademark.
And I was able to basically tackle all
five points preemptively in the chat.
So when it comes to invoice and
receipts, there is no invoice of
receipt. We make these. When it comes to
supplier information, there is no
supplier. We make these. When it comes
to item description and quantities,
well, you know the item description and
how many you have. When it comes to
import and export documentations, well,
we make these. We didn't import or
export them.
documentation showing your faking
products do not infringe trademark.
Well, my answer there is what
documentation could we provide that
faking does not infringe other than the
daking trademark which states the
letters D, A, I, K, I, and N and not the
letters F I, A, A, I, K, I, and N. So, I
preemptively answered all five points.
So, that stock answer is not going to
work this time. And I actually got
through to someone who seemed to grasp
that concept.
Now obviously
I had to explain it's not a fake puppet
um and a few other things but basically
he's transferred it to a specialized
team
but the one other thing I have said is
if it helps if you choose not to return
them then this will result in a county
court claim to challenge your actions
and policy in front of a judge. This is
the course you are taking if you choose
not to return them. As you know, there
has been no legal decision in a court to
declare this product is a beach.
And it does not use the actual word day.
So, it's not automatically a beach. It
needs a legal decision.
It could only be decided by a court, not
by Amazon.
So, that's all been passed through to
them. So, we're hoping maybe, just
possibly this time, it'll get through to
a person who's not completely brain dead
and can actually answer it. Otherwise,
it will be a county court claim.
It may well be that Amazon terms and
conditions and policies clearly state
they can withhold goods and destroy them
at a whim like this. But even if it
does, I'd like to see that in front of a
judge. A judge may well say that that
policy and that contract is not a valid
thing.
Um, I mean these are quite cheap, but
this could be really expensive goods, a
lot of stock and purely on the
allegation of a trademark infringement.
They are holding them and threatening to
destroy them without any actual decision
or court order.
I'd like to see that in front of a
county court judge just to see what they
say and and it will be worth the I don't
know 50 quid or whatever it cost to do
that.
So, and Amazon probably won't want to
sit in a county court and defend their
retention or destruction of my property.
So, we will see.
So, fingers crossed. But yes, this is
how impossible Amazon are to deal with
on a day-to-day basis.
Good luck if you want to deal with
Amazon. And sadly, they're in such a
monopolistic position that it's hard not
to.
Thank you.
Just a note -- I'm probably not the only one who looks at a video, any video, and thinks "life is too short, give me this in a text form I can read at fifty times the speed of this", and goes straight on to something else. A shame: your stuff is interesting when it's in text form, but I've not looked at any of these videos and I expect I never will. Human speech is just so *slow*.
ReplyDeleteI guess this dates me -- I don't see what anyone sees in these short-form videos and trying to look at them makes me physically dizzy from all the quick cuts. But everyone under the age of about 25 seems to be obsessed with them.
I completely understand and it annoys me to.
DeleteI am actually trying to work out if I can get the transcript of the auto subtitles from youtube and include as text in the blog post. It should be possible, and so be the best of both worlds.
Oh yeah!
DeleteSame issue here. I skipped the video. But when the text appeared I read it, so thank you for that.
DeleteEver been tempted to make a thermostat/boiler controller? Faikflame?
ReplyDeleteThere are only three standards, OpenTherm, EMS and on/off relay. A lot could be repurposed from other projects.
My "Remote" project already does radiator control using on/off (via tasmota flashed shelly).
Delete