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Triplenet Pricing Inc.

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Triplenet Pricing Inc. Reports & Reviews (1)

Triplenet Pricing Inc (scammer) has a physical address and website but mostly operates through larger marketplaces such as Amazon and Walmart (they use larger marketplaces to cover up/hide their digital footprint in consumer fraud). The scammer claims to be a reseller of used/second-hand products but they actually lure in customers (victims) with a "like new" or "lightly used" product for sale at an unbelievably low price or marked-down deal. The scam begins when 1.) the victim makes a purchase from the scammer: the scammer immediately creates a shipping label but never actually ships the order (this is important because they're dragging things out so that the victim cannot request a cancellation, return or refund because it'll be outside of the larger marketplace's (amazon or walarmart's) refund/return window). Once the victim becomes suspicious or concerned about the status of their order, after an unusual waiting period between when the order was created and little to no shipment movement... the victim will contact the scammer about their order and the scammer will apologize for the delay, then reiterate that the order has been shipped (shipping will be the cheapest and slowest option to continue to drag things outside of the cancellation/refund/return window). 2.) The scammer will typically either ship the victim the wrong product (an older model unit, just an accessory, a broken/defective unit, or something random). 3.) By the time the victim eventually receives whatever the scammer sent, it may be outside of the cancellation/refund/return window and no matter what outcome, the victim will have to go to complicated lengths to get their money back. This means that the victim has to start collecting documentation to file a claim with their financial institution (bank). The quick start to getting your money back is by contacting the scammer (on Walmart or amazon) to request a return/refund. If the scammer beats around the bush instead of issuing a return label, immediately contact the marketplace customer service (Amazon or Walmart). The marketplace (Amazon or Walmart) will typically help you file a claim against the scammer once they have seen documentation that you reached out to the scammer and that the scammer responded (once the scammer responded with anything less than a return label, tell the customer service employee that you wish to file a claim against the scammer). Once the marketplace (Amazon or Walmart) says it's okay to file a claim, proceed to call your bank and file a claim/dispute about the charge on your account (you might want to get a new debit card too while you're at it, so the scammer doesn't try to siphon the money back once your bank takes care of it). Skipping any of these steps can make this process longer or result in your claim being denied (documentation is important, you need the paper trail because the scammer will be actively working against you to cover up your interactions with them; the scammer will make it seem as though they're the victim and that you're totally not the real victim (of an intricate level of consumer fraud and possibly organized crime). The worst thing about this is that larger marketplaces (Amazon and Walmart) are aware of these scams and continue to let scammers operate because the marketplace (amazon and Walmart) gets all kinds of data out of it, in the form of clicks and interactions on their websites which turns into dollars for them (analyzing our consumer behavior); both the marketplace (amazon and Walmart) and the scammer have no ethics where exploiting people for profit is concerned. The consumer is punished for being the victim. If it's like this on the outside of these big corporations then of course it's worse on the inside for workers; I'm glad that workers are unionizing in these companies though, so maybe something can change for the better eventually. Imagine being scammed like this and having to play a game of chess with the scammer, tennis with the marketplace (amazon or Walmart), and then a game of phone with the bank, all to try to get your money back. It's awful.

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