Amazon has a new rule in place governing seed and crossdressing boy sex videoplant 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.
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 insteadCase 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.
Topics Amazon
These millennial entrepreneurs think email is too slow for the startup worldToy Story Land is coming to Disney World this summerFedEx customer information exposed in data breachSalma Hayek jokes about men while presenting the BAFTA for Best ActorLook at these dumb email accounts Russian trolls made to influence the 2016 electionTwo huge drills take a muchRedditors threaten Coinbase with violenceOxfam ambassador explains why he'll continue to work with charity after scandalWhy wraps are the lowest form of human lunchThese text messages a little girl sent to her grandpa after he passed away are so movingForget yoga pants. Criticising other women's sartorial choices is bad for women.Razor's Turbo Jetts are basically motorized HeelysTwo guys try 'tall man in a trenchcoat trick' to see 'Black Panther'Twitter pranksters are spreading a bug that crashes iPhonesDownload this: Photos Companion is Microsoft's answer to AirDropCoinbase mistakenly drains some users' bank accountsUltrathin display sticks to your skin to show your current vital signsIntel's graphics driver update makes gaming easier on HP, Asus laptopsiOS bug lets anyone crash your iPhone by sending a single characterChadwick Boseman's Rolling Stone front cover is sending Twitter into a thirst frenzy CNN and Kellyanne Conway face off in spectacularly fiery interview Sir David Attenborough is very stoked to get a new snail named after him Sean Spicer's WHOIS data is public for everyone to see Inside Apple Music's plan to take over the Indian market Yup, there's going to be a 'Fast & Furious' global arena tour Drake unleashed a passionate rant against Trump during a London tour stop Pro tip: How to use smoke grenades for maximum cover in the 'CS:GO' Nuke map How to order a pizza with Amazon Alexa or Google Home DARPA tests SideArm system to catch and release drones in the field Powerful New Orleans tornado damages NASA's Michoud rocket factory Elizabeth Warren takes to Facebook Live after being silenced in the Senate Welcome to Mashable Gaming You can now get paid to shove chocolate into your face hole Man finds deeply disturbing mystery item inside pot of jam China wants to control what apps citizens use. But will Google play ball? The 10 moments Snapchat wishes would disappear from its history Super Bowl LI was a bad moment for VR China's big, beautiful, green 'vertical forests' will suck up toxic smog This footballer's secret handshakes are a simple joy to behold Sean Spicer owns the domain RateTheReporter.com
2.0299s , 10519.5 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【crossdressing boy sex video】,Fresh Information Network