Lawmakers Ask Amazon To Prove Itself To Counter Claims

October 20, 2021

A bipartisan group of House lawmakers is demanding that Amazon prove itself by providing evidence to counter claims in news reports about its own brand’s special treatment over products from other sellers.

In a letter sent Monday to Andy Jazzy, Amazon’s current CEO, five members of a congressional committee accused Jeff Bezos, Amazon’s former CEO and founder, and other company executives of misleading lawmakers.

Citing recent research by Reuters, The Markup and others on how Amazon uses third-party sellers to copy products and, in some cases, give its own ads more prominence, lawmakers are asking questions about how Amazon treats its own trademarks compared with those of other companies that offer products on its platform.

In response to the reports, Amazon called them “incorrect and unsubstantiated” stressing further that its employees are strictly prohibited “from using non-public, seller-specific data to determine which store brand products to launch,” and that its search results were designed “to feature the items customers will want to purchase, regardless of whether they are offered by Amazon” or by another seller.

For more information, read the original story in NPR.

Top Stories

Related Articles

April 3, 2026 OpenAI has signed Smartly as its first dedicated adtech partner to refine how advertising appears in ChatGPT. more...

April 2, 2026 AMD has agreed to acquire Intel in an all-stock transaction that would combine the two long-time x86 more...

March 31, 2026 In what would be its longest public-facing outage to date, China’s DeepSeek chatbot went offline for more more...

March 31, 2026 OpenAI is shutting down its video-generation app Sora after operating costs reached about $1 million per day. more...

Picture of TND News Desk

TND News Desk

Staff writer for Tech Newsday.
Picture of TND News Desk

TND News Desk

Staff writer for Tech Newsday.

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn