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145 points

Is this some sort of American thing I’m too European to understand?

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117 points

Yes, it is. That’s because companies like trying unpopular policies in America first before moving them to Europe.

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92 points
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Try telling that to my unequivocal legal right to return anything for any reason within 14 days at no cost to myself other than postage

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42 points

Yes. You have to pay for postage. Americans pay nothing and Amazon forced them to pay one dollar. I’m sure retailers would happily trade free returns for a 14-day return policy that makes the customer pay for postage.

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32 points

Yup, thats because the EU actually protects their consumers unlike the great ol’ US of A

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17 points

It depends. If the company dives in headfirst with anticonsumer practices in the EU, you’re correct; EU institutions will regulate them out. But there’s a much smarter strategy that works more often than I think you’d like to admit:

  • Start said anticonsumer practice in the USA
  • USA is slower to enact legislation against it
  • US customers get used to it
  • Inch EU customers into said practices
  • When confronted, point to the USA and say that the Americans are fine with it so it must not be that bad.
  • 50% of the time EU regulators respond with “oh, alright then”. The news of said practice being introduced into the EU appears on The Register for a day and then everyone forgets about it. Most EU consumers don’t realise it happened.
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34 points

You guys don’t drunk-order a bunch of useless shit then expect to return it for no cost once buyer’s remorse sinks in?

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40 points

Point is, we have laws enforcing that possibility. It’s not goodwill from companies…

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1 point

It’s not goodwill from companies…

Nothing good for customers ever is

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9 points

Why yes, yes we do

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29 points
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Deleted by creator
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20 points

Five years, actually, here in Norway. Technically two years, and five if the product is meant to last appreciably longer than two years. But that is true for most things except wearable electronics like earbuds.

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11 points
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7 points

In Australia our consumer protection laws have minimum warranty for most items (eg 3yrs or something for basic electronic products) but it scales with cost and quality.
It does not apply to everything as far as i know, but say you buy a $8,000 TV, you would likely get 5-6 years warranty because a TV of that cost should imply, to a reasonable consumer, it is of a quality that would be expected to last 5-6 years.

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6 points

2 years by law everywhere in the EU.

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3 points

Two, but I don’t think it applies to medical procedures

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0 points

War-ranty? What is this? A guarantee of war? Sounds like apple pie to me. 🇺🇸

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