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Be very careful buying things you ingest on Amazon. The risk is high of fake products from otherwise trustworthy brands or "fake" brands of some guy ordering something to be packaged at a dodgy Chinese manufacturer with little or no QA or basic verification.


Let's be real. Under no circumstance should you be ingesting anything you buy on Amazon. It's going to take a baby formula scandal like what happened in China before the general public wakes up the problem.


Amazon has their Essentials brand for vitamins which is apparently legit. I think brand name foods and drinks are probably OK since they are hard to counterfeit and if you did get a counterfeit I am sure the brand would be very interested in Amazon's role in it. Vitamins though and any kind of spice should be suspect... I think this is why they started Essentials. Costco also does product quality tests so buying stuff there should be ok. I'd be interested in lead testing Tumeric from Costco, Amazon, Whole foods etc... that's been a big thing recently. We also know Kona coffee is not legit for instance even at Costco.


If there are problems with counterfeit Apple chargers, why wouldn't there be problems with "brand name" foods?

Maybe things with very distinctive tastes (Doritos, Coke, etc) you might have a point but outside that it's largely packaging.


When you get counterfeit electronics, you can usually tell right away. The packaging is off, misprinted, often has a Chinese name in small print on it somewhere. The product looks fine from a distance but up close, the mold alignment is off, it's too light, it feels cheap.

More often than not you roll your eyes and use it anyway, because most of the time it works well enough, for a while at least.

Branded food is a lot less likely to get a pass on any of those. We have a strong sense of what it's supposed to look like, smell like, taste like, feel like; we might put up with less from a clearly marked store-brand copy, but a name brand that doesn't taste like it should sets off alarm bells. And exactly reproducing a commercial food product is hard.


That's very much not true. I've received many fake items - where if I didn't already own the product AND box and could compare side by side, I'd never know.

Even then, until it doesn't work right, you wouldn't know.

There are some _very_ good looking counterfeits on amazon.


> Amazon has their Essentials brand for vitamins which is apparently legit.

Right now, their policies may change in the future.


> apparently legit

not exactly confidence inspiring ;-)


Supporting the counterfeiting point, this just hit the front page as well:

https://twitter.com/nostarch/status/1183095004258099202


Are you all for real about this? I buy coffee, soylent, various hard to find canned goods, and other things all the time off Amazon.


Look at how they mix stock under the same SKU and see if you’re still confident perhaps that Peet’s coffee came from Peet’s or perhaps a third party seller used counterfeit — Amazon’s will put hem into the same punnet and pull out one where it’s from amazon or “fulfilled by amazon”.

Right now I’ve only seen it in electronics but I don’t buy much food that way. Amazon fresh is a different thing (all sourced / sold by amazon) so probably not a problem. Likewise oddball stuff (a low volume brand of tea) is unlikely to be worth counterfeiting. But mass market goods definitely are and the baby food example, while not amazon, is an excellent cautionary tale.


I gave up on Amazon once I wasn't able to buy the replaceable toothbrush heads for my electric toothbrush. Try ordering the name brand oral-b ones and see what shows up (in my case, cheap Chinese knockoffs that lasted about a week instead of however many weeks they're supposed to).

I honestly miss being able to go to a unique store to buy things - that way you could look at what you were actually buying and (maybe!) find something better for what you're trying to do.


If you actually eat Soylent you're in like the 0.0001th percentile of Amazon shoppers.


Downvote walrus01 all you want but I’ve never met a person in real life who eats Soylent. If it weren’t for HN or Reddit I’ve never even know it existed.


I have. He was ... a person of generally questionable life choices. Great developer and a true pleasure to work with though.


As a formerly-Soylent-drinking engineer of questionable life choices, I hope there’s a causal relationship behind that correlation :)


They must exist. I can buy Soylent off the shelf at my local Fred Meyer (Kroger for people who don't have Fred Meyer in their area). They are pretty aggressive about dropping products that don't sell in sufficient quantity.


Amazon sells lots of food items that are sold by Amazon.com. You have to use discretion, but there is nothing wrong with buying multi-vitamins, probiotics and supplements on Amazon. However, it is probably a good idea to not buy them from a third-party seller.


On the front page right now: Amazon shipping counterfeit books as "sold by Amazon.com": https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21243420


Amazon Warns Customers: Those Supplements Might Be Fake https://www.wired.com/story/amazon-fake-supplements/


> Amazon sells lots of food items that are sold by Amazon.com.

“Sold by Amazon.com” is not safe, because of potential commingling with stock identified as the same SKU from Fulfilled by Amazon sellers. If you know of a reliable non-FBA third-party seller, that's the safest thing


At least in its SoCal warehouses, Amazon does not commingle its own inventory with FBA sellers for product liability reasons. It maintains separate internal warehousing SKUs for FBA inventory stockpiles.


Do you have sources for this?


Third party? No, but Amazon used to be a client so I got to see them firsthand.


I bought a box of tic tacs on Amazon and it was just a bunch of fishing sinkers painted white.


Were they sold by Amazon.com or you just being silly?




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