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Tech: Buying electronic items (avoid/detect fakes)
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Subject: Tech: Buying electronic items (avoid/detect fakes) From: Stilly River Sage Date: 05 Jun 25 - 03:57 PM I came across a couple of Reddit discussions today that bear sharing here. One discussed the lack of care when buying items from Amazon "stores" (in this case Nikon cameras) and that the "stores" are not in fact businesses selling their own materials via Amazon. In some cases the items on the shelf are from several vendors and when an order is filled, whatever item is grabbed may or may not come from the vendor you chose. And because they don't do great quality control on returned items, you can get used or defective items. I guess so far I've been lucky, but I'm also careful. After looking through Amazon and finding odd offers and groupings of bundled items on the camera I was shopping I backed out and bought it from a New York City camera store (same price, but a much more reliable vendor). The other thing is not a surprise, and I haven't had problems with SD cards I've purchased, but fake SD cards are what you get when lower quality or capacity cards are re-marked to look like the faster more expensive ones. (This is beyond the "you get what you pay for question" - if the price is too good to be true, you should already know that it probably is fake.) It's enough of a problem that there is software to test the speed and capacity of the cards you have. https://h2testw.org/. Has anyone tried this? From the site: The program is incredibly easy to use, and it can be downloaded and installed on your computer free of charge. Once you have installed H2testw, all you have to do is plug in your storage device and select it from the program’s interface. Then, you can start the testing process, which will scan your device for its actual size and check for any bad sectors.Instructions for how it works |
Subject: RE: Tech: Buying electronic items (avoid/detect fakes) From: Stilly River Sage Date: 07 Jun 25 - 12:23 AM How to Avoid Counterfeit Products on Amazon Yes, even products with that Prime checkmark could be a dupe. Not sure if this is helpful or not. It seems to be actually more for sellers and their items being copied or hitched onto on Amazon, but it might help (looking to see who all sells the items, for example.) |
Subject: RE: Tech: Buying electronic items (avoid/detect fakes) From: Jack Campin Date: 07 Jun 25 - 04:00 AM If there was a way of hacking that product it could be a horrific malware vector loading bad stuff onto your SD cards. |
Subject: RE: Tech: Buying electronic items (avoid/detect fakes) From: Stilly River Sage Date: 07 Jun 25 - 01:48 PM That would be much worse. Good reason for formatting once installed. Having the wrong capacity and speed would slow or disable devices; it's the equivalent of $1 bills being bleached so they can run through printers to make them $10s or $20s. The base material is what is needed to pull off the scam. |
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