娛樂

【】

字号+作者:囫圇吞棗網来源:知識2025-04-30 14:21:52我要评论(0)

Amazon has a new rule in place governing seed and plant imports for U.S. customers: Nope.The online

Amazon has a new rule in place governing seed and plant imports for U.S. customers: Nope.

The online retail giant confirmed in a Saturday report from the Wall Street Journal that U.S. customers are no longer allowed to import foreign seeds or plants. Amazon will still sell seeds to people in the U.S., but only if the seller is based there.

The only catch to that concerns non-U.S. residents: If you sell seeds or plants outside the U.S., you can't come into the country just to sell them inside the country. It might be a trickier thing for Amazon to police, but it's the rule all the same.

The policy change, instated on Sept. 3, comes after "thousands" of seed packets were delivered to U.S. mailboxes over the summer, with many postmarked from China. The report notes that it is believed the mystery mailings are part of a "brushing" scam, which aims to artificially inflate a seller's visibility on algorithm-driven ecommerce websites like Amazon.

The site's "plant and seed products" rules page for sellers does indeed note that seeds imported from outside the U.S. are no prohibited, along with those sold by non-U.S. residents.

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

The source of the mystery seeds that circulated over the summer is currently under investigation. This includes three different federal agencies – the Agriculture Department, Customs and Border Protection, and the Postal Service – as well as various state-level departments of agriculture.

China is also looking for answers since "most" of the packages, which also popped up in Canada and the U.K., bore postmarks from there. China's Foreign Ministry determined over the summer that the mailing labels the country's investigators had reviewed were forgeries.

The USDA has reportedly received close to 20,000 reports of these shipments, and has collected roughly half of them. Agriculture imports are monitored all around the world because new arrivals from abroad could threaten local ecosystems. That's why there's extra emphasis on declaring fruits and vegetables when you're traveling between countries.

SEE ALSO:It's too late to plant a garden, so grow veggies on your countertop instead

Case in point: The USDA's investigation of the mystery packages turned up a number of "noxious" weeds (dodder and water spinach). The investigation also turned up a number of diseases and pests. Those findings "haven't sparked significant concern," according to the USDA, but the investigation continues. The real goal of the mailings appears to be the aforementioned brushing scam.

Seed sales are serious business on Amazon, but they've also been the subject of shady behavior before. Mashable reported in 2019 on the third-party sellers peddling seeds for fantastical, non-existent plants and produce like blue strawberries and rainbow bonsai trees.

TopicsAmazon

1.本站遵循行业规范,任何转载的稿件都会明确标注作者和来源;2.本站的原创文章,请转载时务必注明文章作者和来源,不尊重原创的行为我们将追究责任;3.作者投稿可能会经我们编辑修改或补充。

相关文章
  • Pokémon Go is so big that it has its own VR porn parody now

    Pokémon Go is so big that it has its own VR porn parody now

    2025-04-30 13:38

  • 海港主帥釋疑為何兩外援替補 直言泰山隊配得上冠軍

    海港主帥釋疑為何兩外援替補 直言泰山隊配得上冠軍

    2025-04-30 13:20

  • 大連人末輪必須做好兩手準備 外界看衰何塞帶隊保級

    大連人末輪必須做好兩手準備 外界看衰何塞帶隊保級

    2025-04-30 12:42

  • 廣州隊和海港鎖定亞冠正賽席位 亞泰參加附加賽

    廣州隊和海港鎖定亞冠正賽席位 亞泰參加附加賽

    2025-04-30 11:45

网友点评