Mike T
New Member
It looks like there are quite a few people running successful businesses using the Ali Dropship plugin. The plugin itself and the idea that it is based on are great. You are sourcing products and selling them at a slightly higher price.
However, the review part of the plugin is risky if you sell to customers located in the US. Take a look at the FTC guidelines:
https://www.ftc.gov/tips-advice/bus...tcs-endorsement-guides-what-people-are-asking
What it means is that, when you are importing reviews from Ali Express, if you are modifying, translating or showing only a few positive reviews, you might get in trouble with the FTC. I am guessing that, for now, a lot of websites are flying under the radar because they are not big enough and haven't attracted attention yet. I certainly do not want to put a lot of time and money into developing an ecommerce store to have it shut down or fined by FTC when it finally starts making some money.
My concern is certainly not baseless. Take a look at these two articles (there are a lot more than two):
http://money.cnn.com/2015/10/18/technology/amazon-lawsuit-fake-reviews/index.html
https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/pre...0000-settle-charges-it-used-misleading-online
I am not sure how long it takes an AliDropship store to make $250,000 and I'd rather stay away from paying FTC fines.
Like I said before, it is a great plugin, but it needs some extra work in the compliance department. Crackdowns are a certainty in the future and are what will differentiate successful, long-lasting businesses from the ones that get fined and drop from search results.
I can think of several solutions, maybe you can add your own thoughts:
Because your competition might smarten up and report you to the FTC , the EU and various advertising platforms that you are currently using, such as Adwords, Bing Ads, Twitter & Facebook Ads, etc.
Please let me know what you think. Thanks.
However, the review part of the plugin is risky if you sell to customers located in the US. Take a look at the FTC guidelines:
https://www.ftc.gov/tips-advice/bus...tcs-endorsement-guides-what-people-are-asking
What it means is that, when you are importing reviews from Ali Express, if you are modifying, translating or showing only a few positive reviews, you might get in trouble with the FTC. I am guessing that, for now, a lot of websites are flying under the radar because they are not big enough and haven't attracted attention yet. I certainly do not want to put a lot of time and money into developing an ecommerce store to have it shut down or fined by FTC when it finally starts making some money.
My concern is certainly not baseless. Take a look at these two articles (there are a lot more than two):
http://money.cnn.com/2015/10/18/technology/amazon-lawsuit-fake-reviews/index.html
https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/pre...0000-settle-charges-it-used-misleading-online
I am not sure how long it takes an AliDropship store to make $250,000 and I'd rather stay away from paying FTC fines.
Like I said before, it is a great plugin, but it needs some extra work in the compliance department. Crackdowns are a certainty in the future and are what will differentiate successful, long-lasting businesses from the ones that get fined and drop from search results.
I can think of several solutions, maybe you can add your own thoughts:
- skip using the reviews feature of AliDropship
- import ALL the AliExpress reviews for a product, although I am not sure if you are liable if, among those, there are fake reviews posted by someone else
- AliDropship gets legal advice from someone knowledgeable about EU, US and other jurisdictions Internet Law and teaches us how to post disclaimers, import reviews, etc. This one is something that will work good long-term if AliDropship manages to do it in a cost-effective way (we have to think about them, too, of course)
- AliDropship creates or adds a module or third-party plugin/solution that helps you generate your own, real reviews. Probably the best long-term solution, if it can be done in a cost-effective way. It's going to hurt a bit if a product becomes unavailable and you lose the reviews, but maybe you can also get some more generic reviews for your brand, product category, subcategory, etc
Because your competition might smarten up and report you to the FTC , the EU and various advertising platforms that you are currently using, such as Adwords, Bing Ads, Twitter & Facebook Ads, etc.
Please let me know what you think. Thanks.
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