Guy Buys $3 Billion CD-ROM

from the economy-must-be-looking-up dept

There have been plenty of stories over the years of mispriced goods being found on various e-commerce sites. In the past, I recall stories about airline flights for $10 or computer monitors for $1. All of them were typos, and often the company behind them would deny the sales even as thousands rushed to buy. I never had a problem with companies denying such sales, but many insist that they should be enforced at the stated price. Last year, Taiwanese regulators forced Dell to live up the $15 price it accidentally posted on monitors to the 140,000 people who bought them. Whenever we write about these things people insist that, like in Taiwan, companies should be forced to honor the price.

So I’m curious what people think when the situation is reversed. In an extreme example, a guy bought an obviously mispriced $3 billion CD-ROM on Amazon. Well, the full price was actually $2,875,934,133.57, but amazingly, it did not include shipping (and handling) which added an additional $3.99 to the bill. Of course, it didn’t take long for Amazon to alert him that it was unable to complete his order and that he was not charged for it. But do the people who support forcing the retailer to honor the deal in the first case support it in stories like this as well?

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Companies: amazon

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Comments on “Guy Buys $3 Billion CD-ROM”

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49 Comments
ComputerAddict (profile) says:

Re: Re:

This is what I thought, and Why it makes it different than the DELL deals.

Since with the Dell deals the customer was charged, the transaction was complete.

Imagine if you bought something at Best buy that costs $100 you bring it to the register and it rang up for $10, the worker didn’t day anything and let you pay it. You grab your property and the manager tries to stop you at the door and asks for $90 bucks. Its your property as soon as you pay for it. you have the right to say screw you and walk out. Its their mistake for completing the transaction.

In the case of the CD drive its like grabbing something that was misshelved or mis-tagged, bringing it to the register and it ringing up as $3 mil more than you expected. You wouldn’t buy it and you wouldn’t be forced to..

Chadwick says:

No, companies should not be forced to honor outlandish prices.
It is ridiculous how selfish our society is becoming. Too many people see mistakes made by retailers as something they can exploit in order to get what they want or need.

Its even more ridiculous when you’re talking about a purchase made online where you don’t spend any personal resources, and not even that much of your time. Even if you buy from a brick and mortar you might drive 10-50 miles and you’re only out the gas. And in that case most of the retailers I deal with would compensate you in some way, like 10-15% off. On the same note, I have never ran into a situation where a reasonable mistake, like an item being priced with an old sale price, doesn’t just get honored anyway.

And companies don’t eat large losses like that, they just pass the cost on to the consumer. Bet those monitors got a little more expensive after that debacle.

Frank (profile) says:

It wasn't me

By not being able to be honest and say oops made a mistake or I did that by accident, too many people try to pass the blame onto someone else. It was an error it happens. No he shouldn’t be forced to pay nor should dell have to, unless they purposely misled people. Would someone at Dell not have noticed about 140000 monitor orders and how quick they were racking up?

Jake (user link) says:

This is a rather extreme example, but I would have had limited sympathy for the guy if he’d pleaded poverty had Amazon held him to the higher price in a less clear-cut case. It’s the retailer’s responsibility to ensure that their pricing information is accurate, but it’s the customer’s responsibility to make sure they can afford what they’re trying to buy.

Ima Fish (profile) says:

There’s this area of the law called contract law. In these mistaken price situations, the seller makes an offer, the buyer accepts the offer and makes a purchase, and then in some situations the seller validates the acceptance by charging the buyer’s credit card and sending out a confirmation through an email.

That’s a contract. And it pisses people off when after the acceptance has been accepted… and after the buyer has been charged…. suddenly the seller backs out.

“But do the people who support forcing the retailer to honor the deal in the first case support it in stories like this as well?

Mike, when making an analogy, you should at least attempt to be analogous. Was it possible for Dell to honor those mispriced items? Sure. Was it at all possible for the buyer of the CD to honor his purchase? Nope.

And this guy did not make a mistake to the seller’s detriment. The seller did not rely on its own mistaken price in the same way that the buyers of the monitors relied on the low prices. The guy attempted to make the purchase solely to inform the seller of his or her mistake.

The more analogous example would be the seller mistakenly giving too much, i.e., raising the original offer with a higher counter offer. But that’s not what happened here.

MCR says:

Re: Re:

What if it had been $3,000 instead of $3B? He apparently agreed to the price (albeit in error), and all the little stages of the transaction you described were completed.

Amazon would obviously refund the difference because they’d realize it was an error, but should they have to (as Dell was forced to honor the monitor price)?

Matt (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Wait… no, that is not how sales contract formation works. Courts have universally held that the seller’s advertisement is _not_ an offer – that’s why Dell didn’t have to honor the price in commonwealth countries. It is merely a solicitation, or an indication of availability.

The _buyer_ makes the offer to buy, by plunking down money. The seller accepts or not. Here, the seller wisely declined the impossible offer, which was obviously premised on a mistake about the price. The mistake was probably mutual, meaning there was never an agreement on price. AT common law, this would mean that there was no contract at all (here, common law would not apply). If it were unilateral – only the buyer was wrong – the contract could be reformed to correct the mistake.

Incidentally, this sale was probably governed by the UCC. Had Amazon gone forward with the transaction without agreement on price, the contract would have been enforced at a “reasonable” price, which may have been deemed to be the price of the same product FOB the buyer’s town. In other words, Amazon may have had to eat shipping.

As to whether seller’s should be held to low advertised prices… the standard should be (and is) that seller’s are required to make truthful claims in their advertising, and are required to exercise reasonable care and diligence in finding facts and declaring them. They ought not make deliberate mistatements, particularly for the purpose of attracting sales that they otherwise would have lost to a competitor. Holding seller’s to stupid low prices solves the wrong problem by paying the wrong people the wrong amount. Buyers are hardly ever harmed by a typo, but competitors can be eviscerated by it. They are the ones to be made whole, not consumers.

jeremy (profile) says:

In UK Dell wouldn't be liable

In the UK I believe the Dell situation would have been different. An advert or a price tag on goods in a shop is not an offer in contract terms it’s an ‘invitation to treat’ which is, essentially, an invitation to a potential customer to make an offer. The customer then makes an offer for the goods (generally at the price advertised in the invitation to treat) which the retailer is at liberty to accept (in contractual terms) or to refuse. The retailer is under no obligation to accept the offer even if it’s at the advertised price.

There’s a bunch of consumer protection law to stop misleading advertising but in the case of a pretty obvious mistake the retailer isn’t obliged to accept the offer or complete the transaction.

Lachlan Hunt (profile) says:

There should be some fair rules appied, like there are in Australian retail for mis-labelled prices. There are rules for when the labelled price is higher or lower than the scanned price that specify which price you pay, and how many items you’re entitled to at the discounted rate, etc.

Something like, If a price is mistakenly listed lower what it should cost and the customer orders it beliving that’s what they’ll be charged, but the store charges and ships the item a higher price, then the customer should be entitled to a refund of the difference.

If the store notices the price discrepency before the customer is charged and item shipped, then the store should be able to contact the customer and offer to either cancel the order without penalty or get the customer to agree to the higher price.

In this case, the customer’s card transaction would have, at the very least, ended up being declined due to insufficient funds. If you try to purchase any item, even one at a more reasonable price, and your transaction is declined, then the sale just ends up being declined. You usually don’t ultimately end up being chased for the money anyway.

I don’t have an opinion on cases where the listed price is excessive, but still within the customer’s limits, and the customer stupidly agrees to pay that much. This would be like the case of the $999 iPhone app, where I read at least one customer stupidly bought it thinking it was just a joke.

Michael (profile) says:

What happens next?

So if this guy ends up not buying the CD and instead downloads the mp3’s illegally, is it a $3 billion loss to the recording industry?

The real question here is how did this guy not notice the price? I use one-click on Amazon, but I tend to notice the prices before I click the buy button. I would think a price that high would stand out just a bit.

I also wonder who downstream in the purchase process noticed this and did something about it. I would hope paypal or his credit card company would notice a charge that high and give the guy a call. I’m going to call my bank and ask them to put a hold on all charges over $10 million – just in case.

Griff (profile) says:

Why shouldn't Dell honour the price ??

For one thing, if they claim so many people bought at $15 because of the mistake, then word had got around and they (Dell)should have figured it out too. If they want the advantages that come with highly automated selling, they have to take some downsides.

Secondly, $15 is not unheard of for a special offer. In the UK we have seen special offers of £10 transatlantic flights (offered by a vacuum cleaner company, it all went rather badly actually).
So do you claim that everyone was supposed to know this was a mistake ?

Thirdly, if you claim Dell should have not had to honour it, where do you draw the line. Suppose the correct price was $500 and they accidentally advertised $495 ? Do they get to claw back $5 from everyone ?
What constitutes an accident ? Being able to find a scapegoat employee to parade in front of the press and claim it was mistake ?

I think the only argument for the Dell defence is the suggestion that everyone who bought KNEW it was a mistake. But I’ve seen Amazon claiming 93% discounts on some items in recent weeks. (I suspect they were inflating original alleged prices). Am I supposed to not buy because it might be a mistake ? What constitutes an obvious mistake ?

John Doe says:

Not the first time Amazon has screwed up

Not long ago, they have a $12 million flat panel TV. I tried to put a bunch into my cart to see if they had a limit somewhere but there were only 4 in stock. I checked back a couple weeks later and they were still miss-priced.

Seems like an easy query run every day could catch this sort of thing. Just do a search for all items over a certain, reasonable limit and see if those items really should list for that much. It would be a little harder to catch under priced items though.

I for one don’t think retailers should be held to the price as the consumers know it is a typo and try to take advantage. If you get the deal, good for you, but if you don’t you shouldn’t cry about it.

Jimr (profile) says:

It has been a while since my contract law class…

The listed price is what the retailer is willing to entertain as fair offer for the item.
You, the buyer, then offer to buy the item at recommended price.
The seller then can accept or reject your offer (refuse to sell to you). The seller could counter offer and the buyer could counter offer again… etc etc.

It is you, the buyer, that is initiating to contract to purchase. It is up to the seller to accept or reject your offer. The price tag is just something the seller does to help the buyer start of the negotiations with what the sell is typically willing to accept.

In this case the guy offered $3 billion for the CD-ROM. Amazon, as the seller, has the right to reject his offer. If the CD-ROM was listed as 0.01 cents by mistake then Amazon also has the right to reject the offered price from the seller.

This should tell you that anything and everything for sale is up for negotiations. The printed price on an item is the minimum offer the sales clerk will accept. Take to a manager or higher and they maybe authorized to accept a lower offer to purchase.

nraddin (profile) says:

they should have to give it up

Dell should have to sell the monitors at the price they listed, and this guy should have to pay. It’s a contract, once I agree to pay and you agree to sell you shouldn’t be allowed to say later that you have changed your mind. We agreed to a price, if your price was a mistake you should have said something on or before the time of sale.

TechDan (profile) says:

Hmm...

Didn’t the Dell thing happen through an automatic system? Why should Dell be held to the typo price? It would be impractical for Dell to have a human check every single transaction that occurs, and the system itself is not flawed. This man would almost certainly have been charged for the purchase if it had been a more reasonable typo, and I’m sure Amazon would have refunded the excess and not held him responsible, just as Dell should not have been held to their typo. There’s protecting the consumer, and then there’s shafting the business. Protecting the consumer is fine, but Dell got fucked.

Carrie (user link) says:

Others may not be so lucky

The CD buyer was very lucky that Amazon was ethical enough to correct the consumer’s blatant mistakes. Many online businesses, however, are not that kind, often force consumers into the red because of careless errors. In unfortunate situations like this, companies like DebtGuru are there to help. By working with individuals and companies reduce or eliminate accrued debts, they have already allowed many people to get back on their feet. Their credit counselors are very helpful.

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