On a side note, Amazon should really make it more obvious that those e-mails asking verified customers to answer questions from potential buyers are just that. It seems like every old person thinks its a personal e-mail and gets hella paranoid and/or answers something like, "I DONT KNOW IT WAS A GIFT FOR MY GRANDSON SO I DID NOT USE IT".
Edit: For everyone saying it already is obvious, it wasn't not that long ago. The last Amazon Answers e-mail I got looked like this example from u/justjanne but I guess they've (finally) updated it!
One small step for Barbara, one giant leap for old people everywhere.
Pangolier on November 30th, 2017 at 15:37 UTC »
Anything I don't understand? Fraud.
seeyakid on November 30th, 2017 at 15:57 UTC »
I'm always fascinated by people's creative use of the question mark?
erinberrypie on November 30th, 2017 at 16:37 UTC »
On a side note, Amazon should really make it more obvious that those e-mails asking verified customers to answer questions from potential buyers are just that. It seems like every old person thinks its a personal e-mail and gets hella paranoid and/or answers something like, "I DONT KNOW IT WAS A GIFT FOR MY GRANDSON SO I DID NOT USE IT".
Edit: For everyone saying it already is obvious, it wasn't not that long ago. The last Amazon Answers e-mail I got looked like this example from u/justjanne but I guess they've (finally) updated it!
One small step for Barbara, one giant leap for old people everywhere.