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European Union Cracks Down On Inconsistent E-Commerce Experience
Written by Evan Schuman
October 8th, 2008

The European Union on Wednesday (Oct. 8 ) proposed E-Commerce rules for the 27 nations under its jurisdiction, but if accepted, these rules would likely be mirrored in Asia and North America.

Some of the rules, according to this International Herald-Tribune story, are that retailers must make product information available before a sale, guarantee delivery within a maximum of 30 days and allow a statutory 14-day ‘cooling-off’ period in which purchasers could change their minds and be entitled to full refunds within seven days if goods fail to arrive. And companies would be banned from delivering products different than those advertised.

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Evan Schuman is the former retail technology editor for eWEEK.com, PCMagazine, CIOInsight and retail reporter for RISNews and Consumer Goods Technology. Having covered IT issues for 21 years - and other stuff like legal affairs, politics, Wall Street and the environment for about eight years before that - Schuman is in a good position to gripe about technology trends and sometimes accidentally make a good point.