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The Integrity, Notification, and Fairness in Online Retail Marketplaces for Consumers Act – AKA the INFORM Consumers Act – is now the law of the land.
Congress passed the bipartisan act in December to make it harder for criminals to sell stolen and counterfeit goods through online marketplaces on eBay, Amazon.com and others.
The law requires marketplace operators to collect and verify financial and identity information about high-volume sellers, including their names, address and contact information. Bank and tax or taxpayer identification information is required.
Marketplaces must suspend sellers who fail to provide the necessary information. Consumers who buy items from marketplace sellers will now have a way to report suspicious business activity as a result of the new law.
Online marketplaces that violate the act may incur civil penalties of $50,120 per violation.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which will enforce the law with the attorneys general offices from all 50 states, sent a letter last week to 50 online marketplaces notifying them of their obligation to comply with the new law.
“The Commission will enforce the Act to the fullest extent possible and will collaborate with our state partners to hold online marketplaces accountable,” said Samuel Levine, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.
Amazon, eBay and Meta have all expressed support for the new law and plan to comply with the new rules, CNBC reports.
Amazon has informed marketplace sellers that they must comply or risk being thrown off of the marketplace.
An eBay spokesperson said the platform “fully supports transparency and is committed to a safe selling and buying experience for our customers.”
Lisa LaBruno, senior executive vice president, retail operations, at the Retail Industry Leaders Association, said retailers are hopeful that the new requirements will lead online marketplace platforms to “finally evict bad actors from their platforms.”
“While this law is not a miracle cure for organized retail crime, it’s a significant dose of help that finally holds marketplaces accountable when their platforms are used to sell stolen product,” Ms. LaBruno said. “Coupled with the ORC task forces launched in multiple states and cities across the country, we’re finally beginning to see the resources, collaboration and commitment needed to turn the tide in this fight.”
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