The dialogue was initiated by European consumer protection authorities following receipt of numerous cross-border complaints, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic years of 2020 and 2021, by all the European Consumer Centres across the European Union and the European Economic Area.
The global e-commerce platform Shopify now has committed to making improvements in order to make shopping safer for customers of the webshops hosted on its platform, bringing it in line with EU consumer protection rules.
Over the first two pandemic years when online shopping increased multifold across the European Union, many new webstores were created in response to the increased demand, particularly as supply chains were disrupted across the continent and beyond. The increased rate of e-commerce trade also generated more complaints from EU consumers, particularly in relation to illegal practices by some of the traders operating online shops on platforms such as Shopify. Based on the consumer complaints received by the European Consumer Centres (ECC) Network’s offices, many webshops on the Shopify platform were found to operate straightforward scams, others supplied counterfeit goods, some failed to deliver orders and many failed to supply contact details of any kind.
To tackle this problem at source, the European Commission, in conjunction with the offices of the CPC Network, initiated a dialogue with the webshop platform in July 2021. Shopify has agreed to address and monitor illegal practices by traders operating web stores on its platform, by responding quickly to notifications about problem traders, and making its trader registration more comprehensive and transparent.
As a result of the dialogue, Shopify has committed to the following:
- Redesign its webshop templates to make pages for contact details, Terms and Conditions, Privacy Policies and Refund Policies mandatory;
- Provide clear guidance to web traders on EU consumer law applicable to their e-commerce trade operations within the EU and EEA;
- Supply the registered company details of any EU trader on request by any national consumer authority in the EU Member States;
- Remove web shops reported by national consumer authorities and supply their details for further investigation.
The CPC Network, comprising national consumer protection enforcement authorities in all EU Members States and countries of the EEA, will actively monitor the implementation of these commitments, as well as any further complaints made by consumers.
About ECCNet:
The ECC Network is the first point of call for consumers with disputes and complaints against traders based in another EU or EEA country. During the first COVID-19 pandemic years, when online shopping surpassed in-person shopping in most countries, complaints generated by cross-border online shopping within and outside the EU, from both big brands as well as small traders operating through platform-hosted webshops, led to a surge in case volumes across all of its offices. The European Consumer Centre in Spain was involved in resolving disputes between Spanish consumers awaiting resolution from web companies based in the EU and, viceversa, assisted many EU consumers with complaints against Spain-based webshops.
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European Commissioner for Justice and Consumers, Didier Reynders said,
“Almost 75% of internet users in the EU are shopping online. This is a huge market for scammers and rogue traders to exploit, and they will continue to do so unless we act. We welcome Shopify's commitment to ensure that traders operating on its platform are aware of their responsibilities under EU law, and are taken down if they break the rules.”
>>> Learn more about how to shop safely on Marketplace platforms.