> Our goal is to create consequences for those who seek to do harm
Rich coming from FB.
On the one hand, scam sites should be stopped, on the other, I am not sure we should let companies wantonly decide which domains other people register are bad.
I can't even tell what the legality of this is. What does facebook even sue for, trademark infringement? Or is it fraud related which I would assume they'd go to the courts for. If namecheap is breaking the law, then the justice system should be involved, otherwise it's namecheap rolling over anytime facebook decides to sue them for anything they want.
And yet they are happy to keep running ads for obvious Shopify scam sites that offer insane spec computers for $199 (where the GPU offered alone costs twice that) or an entire electric branded toolkit for $89.
People selling dropshipped items for 500percent markup are the bane of e-commerce for me right now.
i always end up finding the same item on aliexpress and then just dropping the item entirely coz it's gonna be low quality and have no customer support
I've made a game out of it, anytime I see an ad (and have some free time) for a "revolutionary" product or one that is obviously too good to be true I go searching for it on Amazon/Aliexpress. Often I can find a handful of versions on Amazon alone for half the price and/or terrible reviews.
Honestly I've been happy with 90% of what I get on AliExpress and it's rare to spend more than $10 on whatever it is anyway. I've saved many hundreds of dollars over buying from Amazon (often anyway from twice to ten times as expensive).
For the stuff the sucks, I throw it in the trash and move on with my life. It's usually only a few dollars
that is indeed partly impossible to do, one thing they should improve is checking that the one buying ads is actually affiliated with the politician/party in the ad.
Rich coming from FB.
On the one hand, scam sites should be stopped, on the other, I am not sure we should let companies wantonly decide which domains other people register are bad.
I can't even tell what the legality of this is. What does facebook even sue for, trademark infringement? Or is it fraud related which I would assume they'd go to the courts for. If namecheap is breaking the law, then the justice system should be involved, otherwise it's namecheap rolling over anytime facebook decides to sue them for anything they want.