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throwaway-5947375959 322 points ago +322 / -0

I'm amazed by the speed with which Wayfair were able to thoroughly investigate their thousands of global third party vendors and confirm that not a single one of them has been using catalogue items as proxies for moving illicit merchandise. I mean the whole investigation took less than 24 hours. With that kind of efficiency, we should place Wayfair in charge of criminal investigations for the entire country!

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Wankerton 95 points ago +95 / -0

I swear I could have gotten a Slice of pizza for only a few grand.

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Ghostof_PatrickHenry 65 points ago +66 / -1

BREAKING NEWS

SOROS FUNDS WAYFAIRE

SAUCE

https://kekpe.pe/i/5f099ea1088e2.jpeg

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analog_shitposter 10 points ago +11 / -1

Eh kind of a stretch, those are corporate bonds

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deleted 1 point ago +1 / -0
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MLGS 65 points ago +65 / -0

Hell, they did it faster than Comey's FBI went over several hundred thousand emails.

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havax 54 points ago +54 / -0

yeah right? i always thought it was amazing how it took them almost a year to go through 30,000 emails, and then all of a sudden go through 650,000 emails in a week and be like, naw man, everything's good here. thumbs up, bruh.

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Forgototherpassword 29 points ago +29 / -0

It's 'cause they didn't. Of course there was "a technical glitch" that prevented full comparison. Strzok and 2 other agents only looked at 3077. But that's not what Comey said.

But wait, there's more!

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OneOfMany_MAGA 15 points ago +15 / -0

Faster than Notre Dame burning was declared to be not arson, while the building was still actively aflame.

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DaoDeDickinson 10 points ago +10 / -0

Too true

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the-new-style 56 points ago +57 / -1

"We know it's not kids because that's how we ship drugs"

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deleted 11 points ago +12 / -1
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deleted 37 points ago +37 / -0
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TNpedefosho 19 points ago +19 / -0

Couldn’t we have a journalist buy one and see what it is? No wait, that’s asking them to do some good

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DoYouBelieveInMAGA 10 points ago +13 / -3

It's pretty common that those overpriced books on Amason are simply controlled by bots and they get set like that by accident. I believe it is a case of the bot setting the price against another bot, and they keep going up a penny or two. It's been around for a long time, randomly overpriced books.

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Herecomedatpresident 13 points ago +13 / -0

I totally believe you because there are so many weirdly overpriced things on Amazon. So I'm not trying to be argumentative. But why would the bot go UP a penny?

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Snarfbot 13 points ago +13 / -0

Yea doesn't make sense. Like theyre competing to be more expensive than the competition.

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DoYouBelieveInMAGA 6 points ago +6 / -0

I'm no expert but I've messed around with ecommerce a little bit. I think they were called autopricers. There are some sellers who purposefully price things a little higher. Ebay and Amazon are full of these auto postings. I'm not saying one way or the other on Wayfair. I don't know much about the site or this whole issue. The naming seems strange to me, for sure.

This other guy sounds like he has more experience with it than me.

https://thedonald.win/p/GIc36OL2/x/c/13zzjsNd3M

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xopi 3 points ago +6 / -3

I used to do e-commerce websites a long time ago. There are several explanations for something randomly being insanely overpriced.

Placeholder prices. Sometimes something like $9,999.99 is just a placeholder price. No one notices it because it's not a popular item to begin with, and a few yearly price increases where you just increase all prices by x%, and that placeholder number is now $10,825.42 or some other weird looking number.

Actual typos. Not all companies have nice excel spreadsheets with SKU and prices that have been checked by dozens of people. Sometimes it's printed or otherwise in a format that either has to be manually entered or run through ocr software. Forget a decimal point or accidentally mistype a SKU and it's very easy to see something at a crazy price. Anyone who has used ocr software knows that it's maybe 95% accurate on a good day. $333.00 can easily become $83800 for example. Sure it's easy to notice a mistake if your inventory has 50 items. On a site with tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands, that mistake may possibly never be noticed. Especially if it's a very niche item to begin with. Even now I'm sure there are countless product pages on Amazon, eBay, and the like with exactly 0 actual human views

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deleted 13 points ago +15 / -2
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Ivleeeg 6 points ago +8 / -2

Ok, now explain these factors: they're all the same brand shelf, with the same photo listed from 10-15k. Not only that, but they each have a unique name with a unique spelling and it just so happens to match the name of a missing person.

It wouldn't be a good criminal cover anyway if it wasn't something you could kind of explain away real quick and delete the listings, now would it?

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DoYouBelieveInMAGA 4 points ago +4 / -0

Yeah, I've messed around with ecommerce a little bit. Not to say this Wayfair thing doesn't seem strange. It does, but I haven't looked into it much. This just seems like a case of the issue where people familiar with the field see that it's not too outlandish while it appears very bizarre to those unfamiliar. Sounds like you're a lot more experienced than me, so your explanation is probably the correct one.

I just remember this issue with outlandish prices coming up in a video probably 3 or more years ago, and from what I remember it was something to do with bots or autopricers. It could be a variety of things. It does seem strange with the naming on these items, for sure.

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deleted 1 point ago +1 / -0
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plaaaa 18 points ago +22 / -4

It seems the names could be a customization glitch. You could enter any name and it will jack up the price.

I'm sorry but I don't want to be Bubba whatever his name. I think this needs more investigation now.