(no title)
mixdup | 5 days ago
It's insane that the landlord of the mall is also running the biggest store in the mall
It's led to this scheme, but also just the general enshittification of buying things online. You can never trust what you buy from Amazon because their "marketplace sellers" will send you a counterfeit, and it's hard to find some brand names because they don't want to be in that cesspool
As low rent and lowest common denominator as Walmart was in the 90s, at least I could go in and know that a) I probably was getting the lowest price on that Rubbermaid trash can b) it was legitimately a Rubbermaid trashcan and not someone who ripped off the molds, used plastic that was 50% as good, and sells it under the brand Xyxldk, and c) could reasonably expect to find that trashcan offered for sale in the first place
cyberrock|5 days ago
mdasen|5 days ago
BrenBarn|5 days ago
zmgsabst|4 days ago
- Central and Aeon own malls;
- Tesco owns multi-story shopping complexes including banking, retail, fast food, etc;
- and for that matter, Walmart, Target, Costco, and some grocery stores in the US operate multiple smaller businesses inside, eg banks or fast food.
It’s really not that uncommon for a corporation to operate part of their commercial space as a subsidiary marketplace.
mixdup|4 days ago
Incipient|5 days ago
2OEH8eoCRo0|5 days ago