| ▲ | gishh 4 hours ago | |||||||
Umm. I guess not? > Six years ago, I wrote that it was a terrible idea for LEGO to acquire Bricklink and revisiting some of my thoughts I expressed then, it sure seems like there’s some dodgy stuff happening behind the scenes. > To be fair, I acknowledge that there may be compliance challenges operating in some of these countries, where things like local laws, logistics, import restrictions etc may make it difficult for LEGO/Bricklink to do their business there, but surely there could’ve been a better way to communicate this, or invite community feedback instead of turning the whole site off in 2 weeks. | ||||||||
| ▲ | jacquesm 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Bricklink was acquired from the mother of the guy (who died) that started it by some asian 'entrepreneur' who then turned around and sold it to Lego, whose only long term interest always was shutting it down. The secondary market hurts their sales for new sets, or so they believe. | ||||||||
| ▲ | jmonty900 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Even if there were significant challenges in some countries, certainly other countries on this list didn't deserve the 2 week treatment. Lego's actions here are very sketchy. "We appreciate your understanding, - The BrickLink Team" Understanding of what? They didn't describe the situation that lead to their decision to unilaterally apply the same treatment to all of these countries. | ||||||||
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