The news comes just a couple of days after reports surfaced about Amazon offering sellers an AI tool to help them write product descriptions.
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The 2.25-million-square-foot warehouse is scheduled to open in 2025.
Amazon is already using AI to sort damaged goods, while Walmart uses ChatGPT to negotiate contracts with some suppliers.
OSHA alleges the company failed to use established controls to ensure that injured employees received proper medical care.
Amazon plans to move some corporate employees working remotely or in smaller offices to the eCommerce giant’s hub locations in major cities.
The FTC plans to file a lawsuit alleging Amazon disadvantages sellers who don't use Amazon's logistics services, Bloomberg reports.
The new delivery program has a goal of recruiting approximately 2,500 small business partners by the end of this year.
In its annual handling of about 8 billion packages, Amazon estimates that less than one in 1,000 items are damaged.
Amazon may be eyeing the integration of ChatGPT-esque AI into its eCommerce product search function.
A Wall Street Journal report details how Amazon has revamped its vast U.S. logistics network to one leveraging eight distinct regions.
The death of 20-year-old Caes David Gruesbeck has been ruled an accident, according to a coroner's report.
In an apparent effort to reduce some delivery costs, Amazon has offered $10 to select customers who elect to pick up purchases in store.
OSHA also is investigating Amazon for allegedly failing to provide adequate treatment for injuries at a fulfillment center in New York.
The earnings call comes two weeks after Amazon said its Business segment was driving $35 billion in annualized gross sales by end of 2022.
Amazon Business saw its gross sales grow in Europe during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The program aims to help retail stores identify and track marketplace counterfeits as part of Amazon’s efforts to eliminate organized crime on its platform.
Revenues generated through Amazon Business have grown by 40% and its global customer base by 20% over the past two years.
The move looks to help Amazon keep pace with the well-established eBay Motors marketplace.
The decision to bypass wholesalers is the latest in a series of cost-cutting measures implemented by Amazon CEO Andy Jassy.
The company plans to implement the new change beginning May 1, more than three years after many staff members began working remotely.