We sell a brass double-finger ring that the designer has named the "Pistol Whipped Brass Knuckle Ring". It was flagged by AmazonPay for being a weapon or firearm, of which it is neither. We responded by submitting an appeal explaining that we thought the product was flagged in error, as it is clearly not a weapon or firearm. We included multiple pictures of the ring to show just how small and non-weapony it is.
We got a response saying that our appeal was denied, the AmazonPay account was being closed, and we could never open another one.
I'm a little bit in a state of disbelief, as I can't even understand how this piece of jewelry could be mistaken by a human eye as a "weapon or firearm" once viewed - even if it was originally caught by an algorithm because of it's name.
Has anyone dealt with AmazonPay appeals before? I'd like to submit another appeal but I suspect there might be a different or better way to approach it? I've since renamed the product, and would even be fine with discontinuing the sale of that particular ring. I'm not sure of the best way to approach this..
Thanks for any help.
We got a response saying that our appeal was denied, the AmazonPay account was being closed, and we could never open another one.
I'm a little bit in a state of disbelief, as I can't even understand how this piece of jewelry could be mistaken by a human eye as a "weapon or firearm" once viewed - even if it was originally caught by an algorithm because of it's name.
Has anyone dealt with AmazonPay appeals before? I'd like to submit another appeal but I suspect there might be a different or better way to approach it? I've since renamed the product, and would even be fine with discontinuing the sale of that particular ring. I'm not sure of the best way to approach this..
Thanks for any help.
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