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Why is Temu controversial?

thread:

It's a Chinese-owned digital marketplace that's taken the internet by storm. According to TechReport, Temu reached over 200 million downloads, making it the world's most downloaded mobile marketplace app.

Temu is based in Boston by PDD Holdings Inc. PDD is headquartered in Shanghai. PDD also owns the e-commerce platform Pinduoduo headquartered in – you guessed it – China

Temu collects a lot of dara, it’s nothing compared to Pinduoduo.they are owned by the same company

researchers found it wasn’t just tracking device info and activity – malicious code allowed it to bypass cellphone security settings to spy on other apps, read notifications and messages, and even change settings

Pinduoduo gains full access to all your contacts, calendars, and photo albums, plus all your social media accounts, chats, and texts. In other words, literally everything on your phone

Temu is not accredited by the Better Business Bureau (BBB) and has an average rating of two-and-a-half out of five stars. Many recent complaints about Temu on the BBB website say that items never arrived or, if they did, took weeks or even months to arrive

bbb.org/us/ma/boston/profile/o

Temu says the company was founded in Boston in 2022, but the site's 'About Us' page does not mention its parent company

oh there is more

it's a little difficult to accurately pin down Temu's exact origins. In a February 2023 SEC 6-K filing, Pinduoduo Inc. changed its name to PDD Holdings in a special resolution. The company also moved its principal executive offices from Shanghai, China, to Dublin, Ireland.

sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/17

According to the Boston Globe, Temu chose to set up camp in Boston partially because of its proximity to Canada, where the company recently opened another office.

bostonglobe.com/2023/02/26/bus

then there is this

the U.S. House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party published a report that states Temu does not take the necessary steps to ensure the products on the site comply with the Uyghur Forced Labor Act.

cbp.gov/trade/forced-labor/UFL

The same report asserts that Temu exploits a U.S. commerce loophole that allows the company to avoid paying tariffs and complying with U.S. commerce laws and regulations.

@ecksmc
Thank you for sharing all this info with us.

@ecksmc
Thank you for sharing this. I appreciate the information you share and the detail you provide!

@ecksmc
They advertised a lot on the Superbowl, too, not sure if you know that. Probably you do.

@janallmac actually didn't

We don't get sane ads in UK as US during Super bowl unless it's streaming direct from a US source

@ecksmc Oh... well did you get the Jesus ads? 🤔 Or were all your ads different? I wasn't sure what to make of those. People are all mad because, you know, $10,000,000 on vanity ads vs. actually feeding the hungry is a smoosh hypocritical, but they were also very anti-hate, and aimed squarely at an, erm, less-than-accepting audience, which I personally appreciated. There were three whole "Don't Hate People" ads, two from Jesus and one from End Jewish Hate.

I liked that. Hope it works.

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