According to a report by CCTV Finance, some live streaming rooms that focus on "big brand leftover products" and "isolated sample clothes" are actually selling a large number of second-hand old clothes, which are marked by merchants as "default defective products, no returns or exchanges" and other unfair terms, and the prices are extremely low. Recycling old clothes and reselling them under a different "identity" is always a profitable business - obtaining goods at "zero cost" or extremely low cost on the recycling end, and then sorting and refurbishing them to sell as new products, or selling them directly as "leftover goods"; Not only does it attract attention through the use of "slightly dirty and slightly flawed" language, but it also evades responsibility through "not returning or exchanging". However, such live streaming rooms actually constitute multiple infringements: recycling old clothes to impersonate "big brand leftovers", infringing on consumers' right to know and fair trade, and even suspected of fraud; Used clothes are sold directly without disinfection and sterilization and cleaning, which infringes consumers' health rights and interests; The kind-hearted individuals who donate old clothes for free are kept in the dark. From this perspective, such "selling old" live streaming rooms are more like "fraud rooms". Intentionally fabricating facts or concealing the truth by making it impossible for consumers to check the quality of clothing through screen separation, and not knowing the source of clothing, in order to induce consumers to place orders for purchase, may lightly violate the Consumer Rights Protection Law, the Public Security Administration Punishment Law, etc., and in severe cases may involve fraud crimes. Live streaming e-commerce platforms are also to blame. According to the relevant provisions of the E-commerce Law, the old clothes without disinfection and sterilization and cleaning are harmful to health and are suspected of violating the product quality law and other legal provisions, and are prohibited from trading. The platform should take necessary disposal measures according to law. In the face of the chaos of "leftover goods" in live streaming rooms, on the one hand, regulatory authorities need to eradicate the relevant gray production chain, including effectively regulating the behavior of recycling old clothes in the name of "public welfare", making the recycling and circulation of old clothes more transparent, ordering relevant merchants in such live streaming rooms to recall sold clothes or compensate consumers, and issuing fines, interviewing platforms, etc. to merchants in accordance with the law. On the other hand, consumers who are misled into purchasing used clothes in such live streaming rooms can request the merchant to return and refund them, and receive punitive damages in accordance with the "one return, three compensation" provisions of the Consumer Rights Protection Law. Ordinary consumers should also keep their eyes open and question the source of low-priced products such as "buy 3 pieces for 6 yuan", and not rush to purchase or wear them. Consumer associations can file public interest lawsuits against illegal businesses and even live streaming platforms on the grounds of infringing on the rights and interests of numerous non-specific consumers, thereby forcing businesses to reform and forcing platforms to fulfill their main responsibilities. Online platforms are not lawless places, and live streaming rooms are not exempt "special zones". It's time to end the farce of the live streaming room becoming a 'fraud room'! (New Society)
Edit:Luoyu Responsible editor:Wang Erdong
Source:workercn.cn
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