(Reuters) - A second California appeals court has ruled that e-commerce giant Amazon.com LLC can be liable for a product sold through its marketplace by a third-party seller, reviving a lawsuit by a ...
During last year's holiday season, hoverboards were all the rage. The electronic self-balancing scooter was the hottest-selling item on Black Friday and clips from "Back to the Future Part II" were ...
If you don't already have one of the motorized scooters, flagged by consumer watchdogs as unsafe, good luck scaring one up now. Ben Fox Rubin was a senior reporter for CNET News in Manhattan, ...
NEW YORK — Amazon removed all hoverboards from its site Monday, just days after the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said the self-balancing scooters are unsafe. If you search “hoverboard” on ...
A judge in Tennessee has ruled that Amazon is not liable for the damage and injuries caused when a hoverboard exploded and burned down a family’s home, CNBC reports. The plaintiff, Megan Fox, argued ...
Whether Amazon can be held strictly liable for products sold by third parties through its website is a question courts often face. In Loomis v. Amazon.com, LLC, No. 297995, 2021 Cal. App. LEXIS 347 ...