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Wayfair trending on Twitter - Sex Trafficking?!

199 replies

SecretSquirreI · 10/07/2020 23:20

Have you guys seen the stuff on Twitter about Wayfair products being named after missing children (a pillow case for $10k for example) and the theory it's human trafficking?

Blowing up the internet this evening.

Seems unlikely but is very very strange none the less!!

OP posts:
ballsdeep · 10/07/2020 23:24

I've seen that. I couldn't get my head around it! Bizarre

user135664323455 · 10/07/2020 23:27

Huh? Is this like the pizza thing?

myohmywhatawonderfulday · 10/07/2020 23:29

rare.us/rare-news/wayfair-child-trafficking/

Here is a link about it.

Sparklesocks · 10/07/2020 23:42

Isn’t it more likely that the cabinet pricing is a glitch or an attempt to stop people buying them while they’re out of stock - rather than a front for complex human trafficking rings?

GoatsDoRome · 10/07/2020 23:43

That is outrageous. Apparently something can be disgusting if true Nd trend on social media from pure conspiracy driven speculation!? How bizarre

Butterer · 10/07/2020 23:44

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Sparklesocks · 10/07/2020 23:45

It’s quite a big leap to say that overly expensive cabinets can only mean human trafficking...

bibbitybobbitycats · 10/07/2020 23:46

This is the pillow in question. I think it is just some sort of glitch because as soon as you start typing in something the price goes to 10K.

Peachy200 · 10/07/2020 23:46

I found a changing mat on there for £8000 earlier this year. A changing mat.
I thought they must use a weird pricing algorithm, but sex trafficking makes just as much sense to explain why they think anyone would have £8k to spend on a changing mat.

I really hope it isn’t true Sad

bibbitybobbitycats · 10/07/2020 23:47

I didn't realise there were cabinets too! it is surely a glitch?

Butterer · 10/07/2020 23:48

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

LibrariesGiveUsPower · 10/07/2020 23:48

That’s enough internet for today.

KaronAVyrus · 10/07/2020 23:50

Probably bullshit like 90% of the internet.

CrocodilesCry · 10/07/2020 23:52

You really have to be monumentally thick to believe this.

YouBringLightInToADarkPlace · 10/07/2020 23:56

From Snopes:

*In July 2020, some social media users accused the furniture store Wayfair of trafficking children. This gravely serious accusation was not based on police reports, firsthand accounts, financial records, or deep investigative reporting. Rather, it was based on the fact that some items on Wayfair were listed at exorbitant prices compared to other, similar items.

This rumor appears to have originated on the “conspiracy” section of Reddit on July 9, 2020. That post noted that Wayfair was selling utility closets from WFX that were priced at more than $10,000, and offered child trafficking as a possible explanation. That post, like so many other conspiracy theories, offered this notion as a mere possibility and said that it would be stomach churning “if … true.”

Is it possible Wayfair involved in Human trafficking with their WFX Utility collection? Or are these just extremely overpriced cabinets? (Note the names of the cabinets) this makes me sick to my stomach if it’s true :(

This post led to other users combing the Wayfair website in search of other oddities. One Twitter user, for instance, found a set of pillows and showers curtains that were listed for $9,999. As similar items on the website were listed for only $99, this person assumed that the only logical explanation was that the higher priced item was being used to traffic children.
The Twitter user wrote:

If you search bungalow rose a bunch of shower curtains and pillows show up priced at $9,999. Wayfair is fucking trafficking children what the FUCK
Same with other things. They all have big price jumps to like 10 grand. Wayfair also supplies the furniture at ICE detention centers, where children are going MISSING from

Generally speaking, the images showing expensive cabinets and large price differentials on pillows, shower curtains, and other items on Wayfair’s website are real. However, it takes quite a leap in logic to arrive at the conclusion that this is evidence that the store is engaged in child trafficking.

In fact, the more we pondered this claim, the more nonsensical it appeared. Would a large business really use their official website to allow people to purchase children online? As these items are available to anyone with internet access, wouldn’t it be possible for someone to accidentally become involved in child trafficking? Why would a child trafficking operation use a method that would be so easy to track?

This claim is largely based on the idea that $10,000 is simply too expensive for a cabinet, and that there has to be some other explanation — child trafficking — to justify its cost. In a statement to Newsweek, however, Wayfair noted that these were industrial grade cabinets, and that they had been accurately priced. Wayfair said that they temporarily removed these items, as the accompanying descriptions did not accurately explain the reason for the price point.
Wayfair told Newsweek in a statement:

“There is, of course, no truth to these claims. The products in question are industrial grade cabinets that are accurately priced. Recognizing that the photos and descriptions provided by the supplier did not adequately explain the high price point, we have temporarily removed the products from site to rename them and to provide a more in-depth description and photos that accurately depict the product to clarify the price point.”

We reached out to Wayfair for more information about the expensive pillows and shower curtains, but have yet to receive a response.

As this rumor circulated on social media, people chimed in with additional “evidence” of Wayfair’s supposedly nefarious activities. For instance, some claimed that searching for the stock keeping unit number (SKU) associated with these items preceded by the term “src usa” on the Russian search engine Yandex returned images of young female children. This is, bizarrely, true. However, searching for just about any random string of numbers preceded by the “src usa” returns similar results. We reached out to Yandex for more information about the “src usa” search term, and will update this article accordingly.

Others claimed that these products carried the names of children who had gone missing. One cabinet, for instance, appeared on Wayfair as the “Anabel 5-shelf storage unit.” This, according to proponents of this theory, corresponded with an Anabel Wilson who had gone missing in Kansas. While this may seem suspicious to those seeking a pattern, it should be noted that roughly 800,000 children are reported missing every year. In other words, the fact that some of these product names were the same as the first names of children who had gone missing could easily be nothing more than a coincidence.
Furthermore, some of the missing children cases this theory attempted to connect to Wayfair have already been solved. The “Alyvia” shelf, for example, was supposedly connected to Alyvia Navarro. This autistic child went missing at the age of 3 in 2013 and, unfortunately, was found dead shortly after she went missing, having drowned in a nearby pond.

The claim that Wayfair is trafficking children is based almost entirely on one person’s confusion over an expensive cabinet. This conspiracy theory, like so many conspiracy theories, started with a wild and unfounded assumption that would be sickening if it were actually true. As of this writing, absolutely no credible evidence has been offered to back up this accusation.

Updated [10 July 2020]: Added information about product names.

LAST UPDATED 10 JULY 2020

PUBLISHED 10 JULY 2020

BY

DAN EVON

© 1995 - 2020 by Snopes Media Group*

TBHno · 11/07/2020 00:00

I don't think that this conspiracy is true. At the same time, I dont trust Snopes AT ALL

Evelefteden · 11/07/2020 00:11

I’ve just seen it. People are posting that if you search the SKU # it takes you to a site where there are dubious pictures of young children.

I seen a facebook site the other day that was clearly a pedophile site. This world is full of monsters

Sparklesocks · 11/07/2020 00:14

@Evelefteden as the snopes article points out that site gets similar results for any random collection of numbers you put in

SynchroSwimmer · 11/07/2020 00:15

It’s the same on Amazon though, if you search any item, then “filter it” on the right hand side of the screen by “price, high to low”, you can get all sorts of things that are mistakenly priced - just in error.
(E.g.....rubber bands for ££££)

KaronAVyrus · 11/07/2020 00:16

The reason that sellers put crazy prices on Amazon is that every time they re-list an item they have to pay a fee so if they run out they just change the price to something insane.

AuntyPasta · 11/07/2020 00:18

Have you run out of cat videos on YouTube? Enough with the tinfoil hat, conspiracy bullshit.

FortunesFave · 11/07/2020 00:22

I've seen overpriced products like that before on Amazon and I was told companies do it when they don't have the item in stock but if they remove it, it does something to the metrics and they lose their SEO results.

So they add a huge price tag to avoid people purchasing the item as it's not in stock and when it IS in stock they adjust it.

It's highly unlikely they'd traffic children under their real names anyway!

WinterAndRoughWeather · 11/07/2020 00:22

Why are all conspiracies these days about child sex trafficking? The tin foil hatters seem obsessed with it.

What happened to things like the replacement Paul McCartney and the royal family are lizards?

FortunesFave · 11/07/2020 00:23

Karon yes that's it! Wayfairer won't admit it because they're probably breaking Amazon's rules.

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