karlhegna
Warlord
On Amazon the release date of bts is july 10th, but on the bts info center it says the 22nd or 23rd? Which is it?
No.Is it possible that people ordering off of Amazon would receive the game sooner?
Is there any legal precedent to say it is? It would need someone to take the big boys on to make such a precedent and it's unlikely that anyone would IMHO.Isn't that fraud?
That's the issue though; who can prove that they're lying and not simply mistaken? You could say they're mistaken a lot - there are other forums for other products where they state that Amazon was mistaken with the date - but until there's a legal ruling made, that's all it is - a mistake.If they take your money as soon as you preorder, and they are lying about the date (i.e. not just wrong, but actually lying) then it'd be fraud.
If this is a conscious choice by them, then yes, it could fall under anti-consumer-abuse legislation, at least in the EU (I know the US legislation is much more lax on this). What they are essentially doing is enticing people to buy from them by posting a date on which they will never ship - essentially because of that an uninformed consumer would go to amazon and then another site, see that amazon's date is earlier and order from amazon - even though in practice there will be no difference in delivery.I would say that taking money on the promise to deliver a product at a certain date, knowing that you can'y actually deliver it until a much later date would be fraud.
However, iirc, for preorders, Amazon doesn't charge your credit card until they ship the product. So although sneaky, it's not fraud. You can always cancel your preorder once you realise their date is wrong. Also, they almost certainly have a disclaimer that dates can change, or could be wrong, etc.
If they take your money as soon as you preorder, and they are lying about the date (i.e. not just wrong, but actually lying) then it'd be fraud.
I'm not an absolute authority on the matter though.
Well, if there is a pattern of this behaviour and not a single isolated incident, it would be relatively easy to prove they are doing this on purpose, at least enough to get them fined for consumer abuse (it would probably be harder to prove this in a criminal court, where the standard of proof is higher).That's the issue though; who can prove that they're lying and not simply mistaken? You could say they're mistaken a lot - there are other forums for other products where they state that Amazon was mistaken with the date - but until there's a legal ruling made, that's all it is - a mistake.
If this is a conscious choice by them, then yes, it could fall under anti-consumer-abuse legislation, at least in the EU (I know the US legislation is much more lax on this). What they are essentially doing is enticing people to buy from them by posting a date on which they will never ship - essentially because of that an uninformed consumer would go to amazon and then another site, see that amazon's date is earlier and order from amazon - even though in practice there will be no difference in delivery.
So yes, it is consumer fraud.
What part of "you can cancel up until shipment" are you not getting? You're getting all in a bunch over something that is completely non-binding. You are not billed, and can cancel the order right up until it ships.
Nothing lost. Not a day, not a dime.
Well Technically you are losing a number of days as you are promised that you will get the game on a certian date when they know that they won't have that game to you on that day so however long a delay it is, is the amount of days of playing that game you are losing out on.
Well Technically you are losing a number of days as you are promised that you will get the game on a certian date when they know that they won't have that game to you on that day so however long a delay it is, is the amount of days of playing that game you are losing out on.
Strange, it works for me.Im still mad my Axe body spray doesn't cause strange beautiful women to jump on me in public.