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So should I state in my store's T&C that I am not the supplier but merely the mediator? Does this statement alone has any power to reduce my legal accountability for the product's safety/functioning?
As an e-commerce store owner that sells gardening products through dropshipping, am I responsible for a product that caused damage to a client, or is it on the supplier?
For example, a wheelbarrow with a loose screw that fell on a client's leg? Am I open to being sued in that kind of a case? Or...
No, I'm not in the U.S.
However, since I send my newsletter to US citizens I have the responsibility to comply with the US spam rules. And this is why I ask all those questions.
Thanks for the link.
I send emails with gardening information to people who signed-up to receive my newsletter. I also own an online store.
If I identify myself, in those emails, by "a fake name" from "my store's real name", am I doing something illegal?
I don't live in the US. I live in Israel and have a legitimate business here, and also happens to have plenty of useful information about gardening and good English, I just don't have a big market here.
My plan is to work with drop- shipping, so I sell products of suppliers that are located in...
Hello, I'm working on a drop-shipping online business that sells garden furniture and ornaments. I plan to reach my clients through having them opt-in to my email list, then start sending them informational emails.
In these emails I will use text that I wrote, giving them garden information...
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