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The Fulfilment Service Provider in Product Safety and Liability: A Silver Bullet for the Enhancement of Safety and Compensation in E-Commerce, or a Leap of Faith?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 November 2024

Gitta Veldt*
Affiliation:
Institute of Private Law, Leiden University, The Netherlands
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Abstract

The European legislator has included the fulfilment service provider (FSP) in European product safety legislation as a new responsible economic operator (EO) in e-commerce for instances where no other EO is based in the European Union. As a matter of coherency, this adjusted personal scope of product safety law will likely be mirrored in a revised product liability directive. This article explores to what extent the aims and expectations of European legislator with respect to these legal changes (law in the books) align with the perceptions of FSPs and legal advisors in the field (law in action). This is done by means of a legal analysis of the goals and envisioned effects of these changes as well as a semi-structured interview study on how FSPs and legal advisors in the field perceive this new role, responsibility, and liability. The findings provide indications that product safety law currently in force might not (yet) lead to the desired effects. The findings also make us question the extent to which victim compensation is actually improved by the proposed adjustment of the personal scope of the product liability directive.

Type
Articles
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

I. Introduction

E-commerce challenges the way the EU-legislator used to regulate product safety. Web shops and online marketplaces, like Amazon and Ali-express, offer products from outside the EU on their websites that do not always live up to EU product safety standards, therefore putting European consumer safety at risk.Footnote 1 These online marketplaces often work as mere intermediaries for sellers that may be situated outside the EU’s territory, which makes taking enforcement action difficult.

The European legislator tried to improve product safety in online markets by making the fulfilment service provider (FSP) a new responsible economic operator (EO) – in addition to the manufacturer, importer, authorized representative and distributor – under the Regulation on Market surveillance and conformity of products from 2019 (hereafter: “MSR”).Footnote 2 The MSR strengthens the member states’ market surveillance and forms a safety net in case sector specific legislation falls short.Footnote 3 From 16 July 2021 onwards, the FSP established in the Union is the responsible EO under the MSR for product safety with respect to the products it handles, where no other EO is established in the Union.Footnote 4

Subsequently, the MSR-model was used both as a basis for the new General product safety regulation (GPSR), applicable to consumer products as from 13 December 2024,Footnote 5 as well as the new product liability proposal (PLDp).Footnote 6 A final PLD-text along these lines is expected to be adopted shortly.Footnote 7 The recently adopted European Parliament’s resolution in first reading of the PLDp (PLD EP-1) follows this “cascade.” This cascade has been criticised by legal scholars,Footnote 8 because it lets FSP-liability prevail over liability of the online platform (or marketplace under the GSPR). Additionally, the envisaged platform liability respects the hosting exemption under Digital Services Act (DSA). It is questionable whether a corresponding change of the PLD will improve victim compensation in e-commerce sufficiently.Footnote 9

At the same time, the scientific substantiation of the cascade suffers from important empirical-legal knowledge gaps. It is unclear what the effects have been of the already changed MSR. The empirical evidence referred to in the impacts assessment underlying these liability regimes – both MSR and GSPD, as well as the PLDp – is very limited (II).Footnote 10 Also, the first evaluation of the personal scope of the MSR was scheduled for 16 July 2023, but has not been published yet.Footnote 11 Therefore, we do not know what the impact of the first reforms (MSR, GPSR) will be, nor can we predict the effect of the PLD-change. Presently, the European Legislator is basing the PLD-reform on coherency arguments and assumptions about the possible effects of these legal changes, yet we have no idea whether these arguments or assumptions are correct.

This study therefore addresses the following research questions:

What are the legislators aims and expectations of these legal changes and how do these align with the perceptions of FSPs and legal advisors in the field on the FSP’s new role, responsibility, and liability in e-commerce?

To answer the research question this study uses an empirical-legal methodology. First, a legal analysis is used to discuss the (proposed) legislative changes, their empirical foundations and to make an inventory of the goals and the assumptions underlying the introduction of the FSP in the legal framework (II). This way, it becomes possible to investigate whether these goals and assumptions align with the perceptions of FSPs and legal advisors in the field. If these do not align, this could indicate a problem. As Sibony and Bijleveld point out: if assumptions underlying the law do not hold or the law is not applied as planned, it is unlikely that the law would have its desired effects.Footnote 12 From this legal analysis we derive the relevant empirical sub-questions that are included in the topic list for the empirical part. Second, this legal analysis is supplemented with sociolegal insights from compliance research, which lead to additional empirical sub-questions (III).

To answer the empirical sub-research questions from paragraph II and III, a semi-structured interview study was deployed amongst several FSPs and legal advisors in the field, to determine how these legal changes have been perceived by FSP and how they see their role (IV). The design and method of analysis of the interview study is explained (IV) and the results are discussed (V).

The aim of this study is to contribute to the further evaluation of the MSR. Moreover, it provides a first insight into the possible effects and effectiveness of the corresponding changes in the GPSR and the expected new PLD, because these changes are based on similar assumptions and rationales (as further illustrated in paragraph II). The European product framework is partially based on traditional law and economics and rational choice theory, which sees product safety and product liability as two sides of the same coin. Despite their different perspectives (preventive versus remedial), both are assumed to have complementary deterrent effects.Footnote 13 Public law in itself may also result in private enforcement: it gives substance to private law open standards (not only defectiveness in product liability, but also general duties of care). In addition, most jurisdictions allow for a claim for damages for violations of statutory provisions.Footnote 14 Victims may use the violation of regulations by FSPs to support their liability claim or an injunction, hereby becoming private enforcers, possibly resulting in an optimal mix of liability and regulation.Footnote 15 Therefore, the currently existing public FSP-liability could – in theory – already result in tort liability, and could incentivise FSPs to contribute to product safety.

As will be illustrated in paragraph II, the FSP’s expected contribution to product safety in the eye of the EU-legislator does not consist of a safety inspection of each parcel; it regards passing on product safety obligations to their “clients” and actively discussing product safety. The upcoming revision of the PLD could in a similar vein incentivise FSPs to take contractual measures (for example regarding insurance and recourse). From a contractual doctrinal perspective, this is a form of transnational private governance.Footnote 16 An important pre-condition for this to take place is that FSPs are actually aware what their legal duties and responsibilities are and that they fully internalize these (III).Footnote 17 At the same time, this study looks beyond mere deterrence and rational choice theory: it uses insights from sociolegal compliance research to help identify which findings from the interviews might stand in the way of reaching the legislative goals. Also, the findings may help to determine what other normative justifications for secondary product liability of FSPs exist in practice from a legal-theoretical perspective because it gives a first impression of who FSPs are (II and IV).

II. Legal analysis: content, goals and assumptions

1. MSR

Under the MSR, a FSP is a “natural or legal person offering, in the course of commercial activity, at least two of the following services: warehousing, packaging, addressing and dispatching (.).”Footnote 18 The MSR determines that a product may only be placed on the market if there is an EO established in the Union who is responsible for the certain product safety tasks,Footnote 19 such as verifying the declaration of conformity of the product and its technical documentation (a), providing these documents to authorities (b), informing authorities if a product presents a risk (c) and cooperation and taking corrective action if needed (d).Footnote 20 The name, registered trade name or trademark, and contact details of this responsible EO have to be indicated on the product or on its packaging, the parcel or an accompanying document.Footnote 21 The FSP is only responsible in case no other EO is established in the Union.Footnote 22 These provisions only apply in addition to nineteen sector specific product safety instruments.Footnote 23

The original proposal for the MSR 2019 did not mentioned the FSP,Footnote 24 hence why these changes were not substantiated with evidence in the formal impact assessment.Footnote 25 The FSP-provisions were included by the Council in 2019,Footnote 26 because allegedly market surveillance authorities found it difficult to apply the classic definitions of EOs to FSPs in practice.Footnote 27 They assumed that FSPs could function as a primary point of contact for information for authorities and could provide a form of secondary liability, that could enhance the effective enforcement.Footnote 28

Traditionally in product safety, EO-obligations and corresponding public law liabilities differed based on their assumed roles in the supply chain and capacities.Footnote 29 From a legal–theoretical perspective, stricter liability or duties of care are justified if the operator is capable to prevent the risk from occurring by influencing the safety of the product himself or by other means. The importer was assumed to be highly knowledgeable of the market and able to do the latter by consolidating compliance with parties up the chain, contractually passing on legal duties and/or arranging recourse which justified heavy duties and stricter liability. The distributor, who was assumed not to be able to open each individual package and to trade a big(ger) variety of products, used to have more limited duties (compare II.2 and II.3).Footnote 30 The MSR changed this approach somewhat by introducing a cascade of liable actors while using uniform duties for all EOs. The main justification appears that placing a product on the EU market creates a possible risk. The FSP facilitates placing on the market in the EU when no other EO is available and has financial gain of it through its services. The legislator assumes that FSPs “perform many of the same functions as importers.”Footnote 31 At the same time, we know little about how FSPs function exactly, nor do we have a clear picture on their (contractual) capacities, risk management and position in (relation to) the supply chain, which makes it difficult to have a fully informed normative discussion on which principles should be decisive shaping their public law and private law liabilities (hence SQ 1–4 hereafter).

After the MSR’s adoption, European Commission issued non-bindingFootnote 32 guidelines for EOs and market surveillance authorities on the practical implementation of these provisions.Footnote 33 Herein the Commission acknowledges that FSPs do not automatically have a formal connection with the manufacturer enabling them to fulfil these tasks. Therefore, the FSPs need to actively discuss product safety and make arrangements with their “clients” to ensure that they receive – from the “client.” or directly from the manufacturer – the means to fulfil these obligations. This implies that the FSP has to contractually determine in advance who is the responsible EO and arrange the required documentation. To this extent, the guidelines contain a contract checklist for FSPs.Footnote 34 From a theoretical perspective, this could be seen as a form of transnational private governance (see previously I) or regulation and enforcement through contract, which could enhance safety. Capacity to contractually arrange this could, as stated before, also justify a stricter form of liability from a legal-theoretical point of view. At the same time, FSPs could contractually ensure with their clients that there is another EO in the EU to avoid liability, and leave it at that, which would imply a smaller impact or regulatory effect (see also VI).Footnote 35 This raises the following empirical-legal sub question:

(SQ1): Do FSPs make contractual arrangements with their counterparts to live up to the product safety obligations in the MSR and what do they look like?

Whether and with whom (contractual) arrangements can be made highly depends on the applied business model (who is the “client”?) and the FSP’s bargaining power. These business models could differ greatly, as is recognized in the guidance document.Footnote 36 Legal theory distinguishes between the fulfilled by merchant-model (FBM), when the FSP contracts with the seller directly, and the fulfilled by platform-model (FBP), when platform itself provides fulfilment services and a logistic service provider could be the platform’s sub-contractor.Footnote 37 Under the FBM-model, online platforms that explicitly intermediate in the sale as well as the fulfilment would generally not qualify as FSP, would not fall under the MSR and would enjoy the host exemption under the DSA.Footnote 38

This raises the following questions:

(SQ 2): A) What type of business models do we see in e-commerce related to FSPs? B) Who are FSPs contracting with? (see also III hereafter) C) Do FSPs consider themselves to be in a position to contractually ensure compliance and do they have enough bargaining power to do so?

More information on the business models is relevant to determine how the MSR obligations apply in practice and to whom, but also to inform the normative debate regarding the personal scope of the MSR, GPSR and PLD: what are the justifications for FSP liability under these various instruments and are the definitions and duties adequate in light of these justifications looking at each actors factual role and capacity? (see II.2 and II 3).

A final remark: this provision has no added value in case a product is directly imported by the consumer meaning that it is bought online and sent to the consumer by postal services, while the consumer is responsible for the custom- and VAT-declaration.Footnote 39

2. GPSR

On 30 June 2021 the European Commission issued a proposal for a new regulation on general product safety (GPSR) to displace the previous directive.Footnote 40 The GPSR serves as a safety net for consumer products in case no sector specific EU-rules are available or in case they fall short.Footnote 41 The GPSR impact assessment report does not explicate whether FSP were part of the consultation.Footnote 42 At the same time, 70 per cent of all stakeholders were in favour of creating an obligation to have a responsible EO in the EU.Footnote 43 The final text was adopted 10 May 2023Footnote 44 and follows the MSR FSP-definitionFootnote 45 as well as its inclusion as responsible EO,Footnote 46 in case no other EO in the EU is available.Footnote 47

Compared to the MSR, the GPSR adds an obligation to the EO to regularly check that the product complies with the technical documentation and the requirements regarding traceability of the manufacturer and instructions of use.Footnote 48 Also, EOs – now including the FSP – are required to use any personal data they may have on consumers, to inform them in case of product safety recalls or warnings.Footnote 49 In addition, a “sales” remedy for consumers was introduced in the GPSR against the EO that performs the recall.Footnote 50 This raises the following questions:

(SQ 3): What non-contractual measures do FSPs take to comply and ensure the conformity of the products with European product safety legislation?

(SQ 4): Do FSPs already handle consumers’ personal data to take corrective action?

Through the interviews we also wanted to get an in-depth picture of what type of measures are FSPs able to take and what might be the reason why they do or do not take them. These questions are not only relevant to see whether FSPs anticipate the taking effect of the GPSR and its practical implications, but also to get a clear image of their precise role and capacity to inform the normative debate around the justifications of the personal scopes and duties under the MSR, GPSR and upcoming PLD. Although further alignment between the GPSD and the PLD has been advocated, it was already subject to debate. To what extent alignment is possible and desirable ultimately depends on the functions and goals of each framework.Footnote 51

3. PLDp en PLD EP-1Footnote 52

Under both PLDp and PLD EP-1, the FSP is secondary liable for damage caused by a defective product if no manufacturer,Footnote 53 importer or authorized representativeFootnote 54 established inside the Union can be identified.Footnote 55 The distributor is liable if he fails to identify who supplied him the product within one month upon receiving such a request of the claimant.Footnote 56 These conditions shall also apply mutatis mutandis to any provider of an online platform that allows consumers to conclude distance contracts with traders and that is not an EO, provided that the conditions of article 6(3) DSA are fulfilled.Footnote 57 This means that if both the FSP and the platform are based in the Union and the platform gives timely notice, the liability of the FSP prevails (under a FBM-business model, II.1).Footnote 58

It is not clear whether FSPs are able to convert the possible future increase in product liability risk in the price of their services to manufacturers/sellers,Footnote 59 or take risk-mitigating contractual measuresFootnote 60 hereby possibly creating a form of private enforcement.Footnote 61 If this is not the case, it seems undesirable to let strict liability of the FSP prevail over liability of the online marketplace. The latter has the economic gain of the serviceFootnote 62 and could – in economic terms – be the cheapest cost avoider.Footnote 63 On behalf of the European Law Institute (hereafter ELI), Wendehorst, Borghetti and Koch therefore suggest to let liability of the online platform prevail over the FSP, but still make reference to article 6(3) DSA. They also suggest reformulating the definition of FSP so that it is not extended to someone providing ad hoc fulfilment services without an ongoing business relationship with the manufacturer.Footnote 64 We do not know whether FSPs are requested ad hoc regarding diverse manufacturers and sellers or not, what the role of the platform is in these transactions and to what extent the platform determines the prices, terms and conditions (hence SQ 2.A).Footnote 65

The previous evaluation of the directive did not explicitly include FSPs, nor did the extensive impact assessment underlying the proposal.Footnote 66 FSPs could not be included in the stakeholder consultation.Footnote 67 The cost-benefit analysis shows that, given the growth of e-commerce and the expected growth of fulfilment services, this could potentially affect a large group of companies.Footnote 68 At the same time, it is estimated that 50 per cent of consumer purchases are made via a platform.Footnote 69 Given the aforementioned, it is remarkable that the effects of possible platform liability are discussed in such a limited manner. The argument for giving priority to liability of the FSP appears to be the coherence with product safety law.Footnote 70 In addition, it is argued that liability of the FSP would not often occur because the appointment of an authorized representative is often mandatory in product safety law,Footnote 71 but it is unclear whether it always is present in practice (this has not been further investigated, hence SQ 1). The IA-reporters expect a possible increase in insurance premiums for FSPs, but this cannot be substantiated with European data. They assume an increase prevention, but higher product prices;Footnote 72 higher insurance premiums charged by agents and FSPs will be passed on in the price of their services. Also, contracts with producers in third countries will be adjusted to reflect new liabilities.Footnote 73 Whether the same effect has already occurred after the introduction of public law liability via the MSR has not been empirically investigated either. This leads to two other sub-questions:

(SQ 5): Have FSPs increased the price of their services and/or noticed an increase in insurance premiums due to an increase in liability?

(SQ 6): How do FSPs perceive the pending product liability proposal and how do they act upon it?

III. Sociolegal insights from compliance research

Sociolegal compliance research has shown that people, also in organisations, do not always behave rationally. For deterrence the perception of the chance of getting caught should be high.Footnote 74 Additionally, other drivers determine to a greater extent whether companies do or do not comply with the law, such as capacity to comply including knowledge of the law, legitimacy (like procedural justice and moral support for the measure), social norms, and – for organisations in particular – reputation and culture (risk for reputational harm is often seen as part of the deterrent factors).Footnote 75 According to Van Rooij & Brownlee a further understanding of how regulation or tort may influence behaviour, starts with recognizing that people develop a subjective view of the law and how it is enforced. Literature shows that the level of legal knowledge and understanding often is very low, both for laypersons and professionals. Moreover, perceptions of liability may not correspond to the actual liability risk.Footnote 76 “If people do not know exactly when they are going to be liable and what for, how can such liability come to shape their behaviour?” Key questions are the legal knowledge of potential tortfeasors, their views on certainty and severity of liability and their perception on their responsibility.Footnote 77 This gives rise to three – somewhat overarching or preliminary – sub questions:

(SQ 7): What is the level of knowledge of FSPs of the current and expected legal framework?

(SQ 8): What is the perception of their current and future liability risk? (relating to deterrence)

(SQ 9): What is the perception of the responsibility of FSPs for product safety? (relating to moral support for the current rules and social norms)

IV. Interview study: design and method of analysis

1. Design, procedure and sample

To answer the main and the sub-question(s) (II and III), we conducted semi-structured in-depth interviews with ten respondents from FSPs (internal staff) and external (legal) advisors. The FSP employees were legal councils or other parties involved in contracting process. We chose interviews because the aim is to capture perceptions and underlying reasons for certain attitudes/behaviours. Also there is a limited amount of previous data available in this context and it regards a very sensitive topic (confidential information regarding non-compliance for example).Footnote 78

Participant Occupation Company type Company size
Participant 1 Lawyer (external) Law firm Medium size (50-250 employees)
Participant 2 Legal councilFootnote 79 FSP Large (250 + employees)
Participant 3 Legal council FSP Medium size (50-250)
Participant 4 Business developer FSP Large (250+ employees)
Participant 5 Legal Council FSP Large (250+ employees)
Participant 6 Director FSP Small (0–55)
Participant 7 Sales and contract manager FSP Small (0–55)
Participant 8 Director FSP Small (0–55)
Participant 9 Lawyer (external) Law firm Small (0–55)
Participant 10 Consultant (external) Consultancy firm Small (0–55)

Respondents in the bigger multinationals were recruited through the researcher’s own network, snowballing and partially through the Dutch branch organisation Fenex-TLN. We discovered through the first interviews and online research, that also new, smaller logistic service providers entered the market in COVID-times. These FSPs were recruited online. We focussed on FSPs in the NetherlandsFootnote 80 The external legal advisors/lawyers were approached because of their expertise and track record in product safety legislation and e-commerce legal matters.Footnote 81

In the end, the interviews focussed primarily on the FBM-business model and perspective (II.2), which is absent in discussions on product safety and product liability.Footnote 82 We decided not to recruit respondents with help of the European Commission, Dutch market surveillance authorities and/or the European stakeholder organisation for logistic service provides Clay Cat, because we wanted to minimize the risk of lobbying as far as possible and receive new, bottom-up information that has not been included in policy making yet.Footnote 83

The semi-structured interviews were conducted in Dutch or English; quotes from the former as presented in the Results section (V) are translated from Dutch to English. The Data Management Plan and research design was approved by the Leiden Law School Ethics Committee.

2. Qualitative analysis

The transcripts were systematically coded with software program Atlas.ti. We first inductively broke up the data from the interviews and created individual codes to label the quotes from the interviews (known as open coding). Although the interviews were semi-structured – using a topic list based on legal assumptions and existing theory – we wanted to avoid excluding possible new theoretical insights and biases as much as possible, since this group has not been studied before. All quotes were assigned one (or multiple) codes, resulting in 127 codes and 271 quotations. Next, we assessed how the codes were connected (axial coding) and what categories/groups the codes belonged to (selective coding).Footnote 84 Most of these categories, corresponded to some extent with existing theory (III).Footnote 85 For instance, we created a category for “Knowledge of the MSR,” which consisted of 16 different codes.Footnote 86 We stopped gathering new data as soon as the interviews did not yield new insights and the open coding process did not result in new codes (also known as having reached saturation).Footnote 87 The coding and the data set were checked by a student assistant.

V. Results

1. Business models and activitiesFootnote 88

The interviews confirmed that for FSPs e-commerce is commercially more interesting compared to offline retail, because it requires more handling (individual packages versus pallets).Footnote 89 For FSPs the added value lies in big volumes (shipping as many small packages as possible, because they do not require a lot of warehousing)Footnote 90 or additional handling (value-added logistics, VAL).Footnote 91 One of the bigger FSPs, also active in medical devices, has ceased functioning as authorised representative for companies due to the lack of insurance cover available and increase in liability risk under the Medical Devices Regulation (MDR).Footnote 92 Respondents from smaller FSPs indicated that they do not perform customs declarations or assistance in that regard; they refer to other companies for that type of services.Footnote 93

The FSP-respondents primarily operate under the FBM-model, which means that the logistic service contract is concluded between the seller (sometimes brand owner) and the FSP directly, without interference of the platform.Footnote 94 To be clear, also in these cases some orders may still be received by FSPs that were bought by a consumer through a platform.Footnote 95 This differs from FBP-model (see II.2): the seller then takes out fulfilment services directly with the platform and a logistic services contract is concluded between the platform and the logistic service provider.Footnote 96 Multiple respondents declare that the FBP-model is only made available by platforms to sellers that sell bigger volumes, who can be identified by platforms through their own data.Footnote 97 The smaller volumes are not interesting for big FSPs and platforms and left to new and upcoming FSPs in the market (FBM-model),Footnote 98 called “local heroes” by bigger FSPs.Footnote 99

COVID-19 has boosted e-commerce but also provided an opportunity for smaller FSPs to start their business based on the increase in demand.Footnote 100 Smaller FSPs saw their own e-commerce business – as sellers – taking off and noticed how bigger companies were leaving this part of the market unattended for (“we can do this better” or cheaper).Footnote 101 Two respondents consider it to be their role to provide services to start-ups and help these new sellers (“we know where they came from”), when other bigger FSPs will not.Footnote 102 A respondent from a bigger FSP indicated that their clients are bigger brands that sell throughout Europe; they want a European solution that requires arranging EDI (Electronic Data Interchange)- connectivity once.Footnote 103

It is relevant to point out that almost none of the respondents have declared to provide services to non-EU-sellers directly,Footnote 104 mostly because of the financial risks relating to default of payments and recoverability of invoices (see further under par. V.3).Footnote 105 When asked where these non-EU sellers go to sell products on EU soil, most of the respondents refer to Amazon, because it is the main way to sell throughout the whole of Europe.Footnote 106 Others indicate that they don’t know (exactly).Footnote 107 One of the respondents indicated that apart from that, it is fairly easy for non-EU-sellers to find an external (consultancy) firm that may function as an authorized representative.Footnote 108

2. Knowledge of the MSR, requirements and obligations for FSPsFootnote 109

The interviews show that the legal departments in bigger FSPs that are part of or closely related to the network of Fenex-TLN are most aware of the provisions of the MSR and their content. When asked to explain what the MSR entails regarding FSPs, they provide a fairly accurate answer.Footnote 110 But even then, the business structure and how information is distributed within big multinationals sometimes makes it hard for legal knowledge to disseminate through the organization.Footnote 111 Smaller FSPs that mostly operate nationally are not in these traditional informational networks, do not know what the regulation entails, and were – to a certain extent – hoping that the interviewer could provide them with further information.Footnote 112 These smaller companies do not have legal departments and compliance is an issue for general management, often the partners that have started the business together.Footnote 113

In general, the level of knowledge about the MSR in the eye of the external legal advisors is perceived to be minimal under FSPs and EOs like sellers in general.Footnote 114 What is interesting to see is that bigger FSP get more information through the already existing informational networks, consisting of their external legal advisors, through a seminar Fenex-TLN hosted on the topic, newsletters and research of their legal staff.Footnote 115 The smaller FSPs however often resort to social media and closed Facebook groups in which information from sellers as well as FSPs and other consultants that hope to get new clientele from this group, is shared. This information consists of practical tips and tricks on how to maximize profit in e-commerce, reputational information regarding partners in the field, but also information regarding regulations and legal obligations. We have not obtained quantitative data yet, but one respondent indicates that these groups have up to 16.000 to 17.000 Dutch users, which potentially is a large group of sellers and FSPs.Footnote 116 Another way to get information is through their personal networks.Footnote 117 One respondent declares that the market is conservative and that not a lot of information is shared, because of the fear of losing customers.Footnote 118 Also, sellers do not want to share info on the product they sell in fear of other sellers moving to their products.Footnote 119

3. Contractual and practical measures ensuring complianceFootnote 120

The main company risk management measure relating to this legislative change is to make sure a EO is in place on EU soil, other than the FSP. Staff checks whether the FSP contracts with a EU-legal entity residing on EU territory this before entering into a contract.Footnote 121 This is not checked everywhere.Footnote 122 Smaller fulfilments service providers indicate that they also make sure the seller is EU based, not for product safety and liability purposes, but just to ensure the recoverability of invoices for services.Footnote 123 We have not encountered respondents that have admitted to providing fulfilment services to parties residing outside of the EU.Footnote 124

With regard to practical risk management measures, most consider these measures to be solely reactive.Footnote 125 One respondent explicitly considers that the introduction of the provisions has given him some “sleepless nights,” but since the company determined that the provision was not applicable in the end – due to there always being another EO available – the company has refrained from taking further practical risk management measures, also because of the costs (such as more elaborate product registrations systems for further checks on documentation).Footnote 126

Some parties indicate that the existing contracts and terms and conditions already have general provisions requiring contracting parties or the goods to comply with applicable regulation, which might cover these new responsibilities also.Footnote 127 Fenex-TLN has also developed new indemnity clauses and contracting policy in response to the MSR to be used by its members (not publicly available) as well as a standard declaration to let clients declare who is the responsible EO and sign off on this, but these are not all implemented.Footnote 128 Only one respondent has indicated that with regard to all running contracts, such a one-sided declaration was sent and received without explicit objections by the clients.Footnote 129 The practical solution of an informal check of another EO in the Union appears the main strategy. Some bigger FSPs have standardized the check of another EO in the Union by adjusting their warehouse management system with obligatory entry fields for clients that want to use their services: services may only be obtained if a responsible EO within the EU is indicated by the client. Otherwise, the order cannot be placed, nor processed.Footnote 130 Whether it is filled in correctly is only checked reactively.Footnote 131 One respondent indicates that a contractual provision is included that the FSP is allowed to notify the authorities in case something is wrong with a product.Footnote 132

Bigger FSPs indicate that in response to the MSR special indemnity clauses regarding recall costs have been developed and are now made policy in drafting contracts,Footnote 133 also because insurance cover for these liability risks and recall costs is not available, as they have been told by insurers and/or representatives of the insurance industry.Footnote 134 Respondents in smaller FSPs often do not know what (exactly) has been agreed upon in the T&Cs,Footnote 135 nor do they have a clear overview of what (exactly) is insured (V.6).Footnote 136 Some smaller FSPs have received external legal advice regarding their contracts, but have also used contracts of other FSPs (which they had access to as being also an online seller online) as a model for their own contracts.Footnote 137

Existing contracts and conditions also include provisions that exclude liability or require cooperation in case of governmental action which respondents assume will also apply in case authorities contact them based on the MSR.Footnote 138 Since the respondents assume that their EU-based clients/sellers are responsible under the MSR, they assume such information is available and will be provided.Footnote 139 The external advisors see the inclusion of duties to cooperate as one of the main responses to the MSR.Footnote 140

What is contractually feasible ultimately depends on the room for negotiation and the commercial interest at play. With bigger FSP, the sales team does the negotiations whereas the legal check rests with the legal department.Footnote 141 The intensity of the legal checks of the contracts, also regarding the indemnity clauses therein, also depends on the product market. In medical devices, the FSP’s clients have their own legal advisors, and more questions are asked about the content.Footnote 142 In general, respondents indicate that there appears to be room for negotiation because there is not a strong dependency on certain sellers and/or platforms. Big FSPs sometimes have to do investments to be able to provide certain logistics services (keep warehousing available, specific machinery etc.) in which case specific contractual arrangements are made.Footnote 143 Some include liability caps.Footnote 144 Another respondent indicates that there is some leeway regarding indemnity clauses; it remains a risk assessment.Footnote 145 There is still room to say ‘no’ to risks that appear too big; the final decision lies with the director.Footnote 146 The external legal advisors are not always involved in the day to day negotiations, so they were not able to give detailed information in that regard.Footnote 147

The market for local, smaller fulfilment services appears not to be dictated by sellers (at least in the eye of the respondents). As one of the respondents put it: “there are more sellers looking for logistic services than there are logistic service providers available”, which makes it possible to be selective.Footnote 148 At the same time, with the companies that do not have product safety top of mind, the negotiations often regard other risks such as theft (see V.4 hereafter).Footnote 149

We asked FSPs about the processing of personal data and whether this data might be available for corrective action. Most FSP indicated that this data is available. They do not store it specifically for this purpose, but as a safeguard, in case something else goes wrong in the process (damage to the product etc).Footnote 150 One respondent indicates that these are mere postal addresses, and not e-mail addresses which – in case a product is sold through a platform – should be available at the platform and/or seller.Footnote 151

4. Perception of the liability risk and responsibilityFootnote 152

In general the liability risk is perceived to be small, not only because other responsible EOs in the Union are in place and deemed responsible,Footnote 153 but also because some respondents indicate that they mostly contract with companies with a good reputation.Footnote 154 The type of risks that are more top of mind with the smaller FSPs are risk of theft, pests and safety inside the warehouse (risk of fire, drugs), which are the risks that are addressed and/or covered in general terms and conditions.Footnote 155 Two respondents indicated that because of the fact that online platforms sharpen their product safety policies (asking for more documentation, pictures of CE-marking etc.), this increases the FSP’s confidence in those sellers that they have everything in order.Footnote 156

FSPs perceive the risk of market surveillance or enforcement to be very small.Footnote 157 Some indicate that they think market surveillance authorities are severely understaffed and therefore not enforcing or will not be too strict in light of the FSP’s limited role.Footnote 158 Some respondents indicate that chances are very small that they will be approached as a response regarding an unsafe product because the name of the company is not on the product.Footnote 159 Another explained that they have changed the name of the company on the packages they send into something unrecognisable, because of the fact that they were receiving too many calls from recipients who wanted to know who sent them the package (in case of surprise presents etc.).Footnote 160

None of the participants have heard of a FSP ever been approached by the authorities because of an unsafe product.Footnote 161 Other authorities do enter the premises regularly (customs, food safety, existing other certifications).Footnote 162 As one of the respondents put it: “The first time a fine is imposed or liability follows, this would be world news.”Footnote 163 One of the respondents indicates that no recall have taken place in the company; “otherwise people would have been more cautious about it, but I do not think this crosses people’s minds or that this is something they are aware of.”Footnote 164 This might be typical for the Dutch situation. One of the legal advisors explained that in Germany, the authority under the radio equipment directive has approached German FSPs for cooperation, which was a direct result of the MSR, but the respondent is not aware of any fines being imposed.Footnote 165

Civil liability – because of violation for a statutory duty from the MSR and/or product liability as a result of the pending revision of the product liability directive – does not appear to be top of mind or something that is considered. Most FSP-respondents are not aware of the existence of the PLDp when asked directly.Footnote 166 One respondent is not aware of the PLDp, but indicates that they are aware of the possible option in the future of extending liability for bodily injury and damage to goods to the FSP, which might be a socially desirable answer.Footnote 167 Another respondent indicates that they also perform small adjustments to products, which could result in product liability (changing plugs of electronics).Footnote 168 Another respondent points out that there might be a risk in stating your company name on a product which they thought might result in liability for the products itself.Footnote 169

Some bigger FSPs consider compliance to be important and “not something that is (a) negotiable.” The company has a good reputation to uphold.Footnote 170 At the same time, they do not understand the MSR approach, since it does not cover direct import. Moreover, they find it unfair that the MSR excludes postal services from its scope, while FSPs also do not know what is in the package.Footnote 171

The safety risks regarding products from outside the EU are seen and acknowledged by the respondents. Some of the bigger FSPs declare not to consider the supplier of such risky products their clientele or core business.Footnote 172 The smaller FSPs, do encounter a lot of “Chinese junk” in their warehouses – explicitly acknowledging the doubtful safety and quality of it – but see the safety of it as the responsibility of the seller.Footnote 173 As one of the respondents put it:

[Person 1]: You know, if you know that you sell vitamin D and that it has to be within a certain temperature, then you must also ask us about this in advance. We don’t do that out of the box, so to speak. [Interviewer]: So everything is done on the instructions of the selling party? [Person 1]: Yes, because yes, that’s what I’m a little afraid of sometimes. For people on medications and those kinds of conditions, what the health risk can be. Yes, that’s a thing, so to speak, so I’m afraid of that too. [Interviewer]: But do not proactively discuss it yourself when you see it in the warehouse? [Person 1]: Yes. Look, when the customer says…. Yes, of course you know. If you see it, sometimes yes, but hey, I can’t see everything. We have 8000 products. And it comes and goes every day, so in terms of visual supervision it is really very difficult. I know that [platform] does this based on data, because it would of course also cause reputational damage if you were to do it differently, but we could also look at that;,okay, what type or type product is it’. Anyway, we’re still a bit too small for that, I think.

Only one smaller FSP recalls an anecdote that they were approached by a seller who was excluded from a platform because of an unsafe toy that apparently was lethal but was just ordered by the seller that the FSP refused to handle/store (“Nice and all, but I have a child myself. We are not going or I am not going to facilitate this”).Footnote 174 At the same time, they see a lack of safety as a result of the product prices that are just unrealistically low.Footnote 175

Interestingly, these smaller FSPs also point out the lack of knowledge of sellers about legal requirements and the lack of market surveillance in that regard.Footnote 176 Some indicate that more information might raise the awareness and subsequently improve product safety.Footnote 177

5. Perceptions regarding the price of the services and of insurance premiumsFootnote 178

Also, we asked participants whether the change in legislation led to an increase in product prices, due to converting the increase in risk or the rise in insurance premiums. None declare that this is the case.Footnote 179 This is consistent with the previous answers which indicate low knowledge under the small FSPs and low perception of liability risk in general, as well as a perceived lack of (affordable) insurance options. Riskier products and riskier businesses (start-ups) are reasons to take extra financial measures (require deposits, send invoices more regularly), because of the financial risks involved.Footnote 180 Smaller FSPs use fixed fees per package and work with add-ons regarding specific type of handling; one FSP indicates that indexing is allowed once a year and to a maximum of 5 per cent.Footnote 181

The participants declared that the premium of logistic policies depends on the annual turnover of the company.Footnote 182 Smaller FSPs are insured against all types of risks, including liability, but do not know whether product liability is part of it.Footnote 183 Another respondent at a bigger FSP indicates not to know which risks are covered, but assumes that product liability cover is part of it.Footnote 184

6. Perception on the role of the platformFootnote 185

Although the focus of this study was the position and role of the FSP, the role of platforms remained a reoccurring theme in the interviews. One of the external advisors declares that – from a sellers perspective – there have been discussions on whether to form a branch organisation or collective to counterbalance the power bigger platforms have over small sellers.Footnote 186 The small FSPs and the consultant do not find the current policy used by certain platforms just or experience their clients being a “toy in the hands of [platform]”; if sellers do not deliver in time or cannot live up to the platform’s demands, they are excluded from the platform too easily, which the FSPs notice because one of the main sale channels of one of their clients falls away.Footnote 187 A platform may in practice also demand to lower the product price because the product is cheaper elsewhere (see IV for implications).Footnote 188 One FSP also finds it undesirable from a sustainability perspective, that the platform does not cooperate more with local FSPs, because more warehousing facilities are being built while others are staying vacant.Footnote 189 That said, these respondents are in direct competition with the platform and some are also sellers on the platform themselves, which might colour their views (see under VI). It was hard to form a clear picture on the FBP-model in practice, due to secrecy and opacity of the T&Cs of platforms under this model, the latter was also confirmed by one of the external attorneys interviewed.Footnote 190

VI. Discussion

The aim of this study was to make an inventory of the legislator’s assumptions regarding the goals and possible effects of the (proposed) legal changes in the MSR, the GPSR and the upcoming PLD, by means of a legal analysis, and to verify, by means of a semi-structured interview study, whether the perceptions of FSPs and legal advisors in the field align with these assumptions. The findings are discussed together with some policy implications, after which the limitations of the study are addressed and a further research agenda is given.

To start with the MSR, this study provides indications that this legislative change might not (yet) have the desired effect, due to the lack of knowledge of especially smaller FSPs, a group who is also doing business with smaller unknowledgeable sellers. Improving information on the legal framework for product safety for EOs is one of the focal points for the EU-legislator and European Commission. Article 8(1) of the MSR holds that the European Commission shall ensure that the Your Europe portal provides users with easy online access to information about the product requirements and rights, obligations and rules derived from the Union harmonization legislation.Footnote 191 Moreover, the European Commission tries to improve national product contact points to better inform EOs.Footnote 192 EOs may request information at a local office if needed, after which it will be provided free of charge.Footnote 193 This still requires an initiative from the EO itself and some sort of awareness of the lack of knowledge, which this study shows, is not always there. This study also shows that for at least the smaller FSPs interviewed, social media and their own information networks are more important sources of information regarding legislation on product safety. If most of these new companies are not related to a branch organization, it is important that the parties within these groups are also actively reached.Footnote 194

Another worrisome finding – that could hinder the effectiveness of this legislative change – is the lack of perceived responsibility. Even if there is knowledge, FSPs perceive the sellers to be the completely responsible for product safety. The statements by FSP’s regarding the “Chinese junk” they encounter in their warehouses show that they acknowledge the risks that online products might impose and that they condemn these. At the same time, FSPs do not actively discuss product safety with sellers (ex-ante nor ex post). This underlying goal of the new framework (raising awareness and sharing information with “clients,” see also the Guidelines, II.1) is not reached. There could be several explanations for this apparent inaction, which need to be further explored.Footnote 195 What is clear is that, if the internal perception nor the social norm for FSPs is indicating that product safety is also a responsibility of FSPs, chances are extremely small that FSPs will actively take on any responsibility or proactively take action regarding product safety in the supply chain, and a corresponding role in this process. On top of this, there is a perceived lack of market surveillance as well as unawareness of a possible future increase in product liability risk (due to unawareness of the legislative framework as well as low chance of receiving a claim), and therefore a lack of deterrence.Footnote 196 Additionally, the platforms involvement is experienced by some as an extra security, because of their sharpened product safety policies (probably due to the Product safety pledge and revised GPSR with more extensive obligations). All together this indicates that – at least for the interviewees – there are few internal motivators/drivers nor external incentives for contributing to product safety and/or compliance, other than making sure there is another responsible EO present (see III).

Product safety and liability follow a cascade model that results in residual liability for FSPs, they do not provide for joint liability between EOs. Moreover, it follows the hosting exemption under the DSA for platforms.Footnote 197 These findings make us question the cascade model regarding its substantial effectiveness as these FSPs do not appear to move beyond formal compliance.Footnote 198 Within Europe, diverse models of regulation are proposed with regards to diverse interests. For example, the recently adopted Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive goes beyond mere obligations and requires in-scope lead firms to put in place due diligence mechanisms, including contractual assurances, that create a responsibility throughout the value chain.Footnote 199 The regulatory approaches do not always appear consistent and need further reflection and research in e-commerce regarding trade of goods.

May it be expected that the increase in liability risk of FSPs under the PLDp leads to better compensation? This study shows that details of the FSP are often not present on the packaging (or not recognisable as such) which could make a claim against a FSP practically unenforceable.Footnote 200 Transparency throughout the supply chain remains key: both for market surveillance and for product liability. For the time being, it is not always mandatory to register your responsible EO as non-EU producer in a public register, as it is under the Directive for waste electrical and electronic equipment.Footnote 201 Transparency and traceability might improve with the introduction of the digital product passport under the recently adopted Eco-design directive and the proposed Toy safety regulation, which hopefully will be used throughout the whole EU product safety framework.Footnote 202 If a product passport is not in place, a product may not be released by customs authorities for free circulation. A digital register for product passports will be drawn up which could also give insights into who currently serve as responsible EOs on EU territory.

Apart from the revised PLD’s contributory role to product safety, this research provides some information as to whether any further normative justifications for product liability of FSPs exist. Although the interviewees do not have specific knowledge of the product, they do appear contractually in a position to appoint another responsible EO (or refuse service) or take other risk-management measures toward sellers. Further quantitative research could show whether this type of capacity is representative, which could justify a liability in line with the importer.Footnote 203

At the same time this study has limitations. It is perception research, and people’s perceptions do not always align with their actions. Moreover, in this study most FSPs indicate that they not to provide services to non-EU-sellers directly. This could be because there is an actual seller or an authorized representative present, or this could simply be a socially desirable answer. Either way, this justifies further quantitative research to see whether this applies to all FSPs under the FBM-model, in which case the increase in liability risk for them in practice could be limited. Also, we need to study the perspectives of sellers to see whether the answers match. It also raises the question who these sellers are and whether they live up to their product safety obligations, which might be at the heart of the problem.

Regarding online platforms/marketplaces and their liability, this research provides only part of the puzzle. Under the FBM-model, where no direct contract exists between a platform and an FSP, platforms still exercise a great deal of power towards sellers, which may practically extend to and effect the business of the external FSPs. This requires further quantitative research both regarding the influence of platforms through their sellers on FSPs, as well as the relationship between the seller and the platform to determine how platforms/online marketplaces should be regulated.Footnote 204 On the one hand, some of the answers indicate that the product safety policies of some platforms might have sharpened, possibly as a result of the Product Safety Pledge and GPSR, which is a good thing. At the same time, FSPs also report unjust practices regarding price setting (which could pre-empt application of the DSA-host exemption),Footnote 205 content moderation and blocking from the platform, which falls partially under the DSA and other regulations.Footnote 206

This study focussed on perception research under ten participants – a relatively small sample – but could form a relevant basis for a quantitative study such as a survey or experiment under a more representative sample of legal staff under FSPs. Such a survey should not only be distributed through the more traditional channels of the relevant branch organisations, but also through social media, being an important source of information for new and upcoming companies.

Supplementary material

For supplementary material accompanying this paper visit https://doi.org/10.1017/err.2024.84

Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank Lisette Velema for her research assistance, as well as Vanessa Mak, Jan van Staalduinen, Meral Cornax, Chloe Scanlan and the peer-reviewer(s) for their valuable feedback.

Financial support

This research was partially funded through the Dutch governmental funding under the ‘Sectorplan Law’ in the domain of empirical legal studies, as well as the Van Wersch Springplank Prize 2021.

Competing interests declaration

For the sake of transparency, also to avoid any doubts regarding academic integrity, the author wants to make clear that she has worked as a solicitor with a commercial law firm up to 2012, also representing – amongst many others – logistic service providers, by which she has gained specific knowledge and contacts in the field of trade and logistics. However, this research does not touch upon topics that may fall under client-attorney privilege, nor does this previous experience exert an undue influence on the content or publication of the authors current work. Therefore, there is no conflict of interest.

References

1 V. Ulfbeck & P. Verbruggen, “Online Marketplaces and Product Liability: Back to the Where We Started?” (2022) 6 ERPL, 1–24, 1 with reference to Office for Product Safety and Standards, “Government Issues Online Marketplaces Product Safety Message” (UK Government, 10 November 2021): https://www.gov.uk/government/news/government-issues-online-sales-product-safety-message; M. Stevens, “66% of products tested from online marketplaces AliExpress, Amazon Marketplace, eBay and Wish failed safety tests” (Which?, 24 February 2020): https://www.which.co.uk/news/article/66-of-products-tested-from-online-marketplaces-amazon-marketplace-aliexpress-ebay-and-wish-failed-safety-tests-aHF9S3n8JmTp. See also A Brezon, S Shifflett & J Scheck, “Amazon Has Ceded Control of Its Site. The Result: Thousands of Banned, Unsafe or Mislabeled Products” (Wall Street Journal, 23 Augustus 2019): https://www.wsj.com/articles/amazon-has-ceded-control-of-its-site-the-result-thousands-of-banned-unsafe-or-mislabeled-products-11566564990.

2 Regulation (EU) 2019/1020 on market surveillance and compliance of products [2019] OJ L 169/1 (MSR). Art 3(13) MSR.

3 Recitals 1 and 4, Art 4(3) MSR.

4 Art 44 MSR on its entry into force and Art 4(2)(d) MSR on its denomination.

5 Art 52 Regulation (EU) 2023/988 on general product safety [2023] OJ L 135/1 (GPSR).

6 Art 7(4) European Commission, Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products, COM(2022) 495 final; https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20231205IPR15690/deal-to-better-protect-consumers-from-damages-caused-by-defective-products (PLDp). See also G Wagner, “Liability Rules for the Digital Age – Aiming for the Brussels Effect –” (2022) JETL 13(3), 191–243, 213.

7 At the time of final submission, we were still awaiting the Council’s first reading position after the decision by the European Parliament in the legislative resolution of 12 March 2024 (first reading, P9_TA(2024)0132, A9-0291/2023, 2022/0302(COD)(PLD EP-1), which may affect the numbering. Art 8(1)(c)(iii) PLD EP-1 grosso modo follows the cascade of Art 7(4) PLDp and is not expected to change much substantively.

8 C Wendehorst, J Borghetti, B Koch, “The European Commission’s Proposal for a Revised Product Liability Directive. Feedback From the European Law Institute” (European Law Institute 2022), 1, 15-17; G Veldt, “The New Product Liability Proposal – Fit for the Digital Age or in Need of Shaping Up? An Analysis of the Draft Product Liability Directive” (2023) 12 Journal of European Consumer and Market Law 24.

9 Art 7(6) PLDp or art. 8(4) PLD EP-1 in conjunction with Art 6(3) Regulation (EU) 2022/2065 on a Single Market For Digital Services [2022] OJ L 277/1 (DSA). Veldt 2023a [supra note 8] 24–31.

10 G Veldt, ‘Empirische fundamenten van het personele toepassingsbereik van het productaansprakelijkheidsvoorstel in relatie tot e-commerce’ (2023) Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Burgerlijk Recht (9) 375-387; J Borghetti, “Taking EU Product Liability Law Seriously: How Can the Product Liability Directive Effectively Contribute to Consumer Protection” (2023) 1 French Journal of Legal Policy, 1–46.

12 A Sibony, “Data and arguments: empirical research in consumer law,” in H-W Micklitz, A L Sibony, F Esposito (ed), Research Methods in Consumer Law: A Handbook (Edward Elgar 2018), 165, 185–186; C Bijleveld, Research Methods for Empirical Legal Studies: An Introduction (Eleven Publishing 2023), 8.

13 S Shavell, “A Model of the Optimal Use of Liability and Safety Regulation” (1984) 15 The RAND Journal of Economics 271. Tort laws deterrent effect is assumed and researched extensively. Empirical findings are non-conclusive, see for example the vignette study by W J Cardi, R Penfield & A H Yoon, “Does Tort Law Deter individuals?” (2012) 9 Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 567.

14 Even in jurisdictions that apply additional requirements (such as Germany, Austria and the Netherlands), the interests of victims are likely to fall under the protective scope of the directly applicable obligations of EOs under the MSR § 823 Abs. 2 BGB for Germany. Art. 6:163 BW for the Netherlands. The scope of each provision has to be determined separately. Provisions from the GPSD have qualified in Germany as Schutznorm, T Lenz, Produkthaftung (2. Auflage, Beck 2023), 192; Foerste/v. Westphalen, ProdHaft-HdB (Beck 2012)/Foerste §32 Rn. 12 ff. Compare for an overview in light of the AI act: Wagner 2022 [supra note 6], 233–34.

15 Compare M Faure, L Visscher & F Weber, ‘Smart Instrument Mixes to Deal with Legal but Unhealthy Products and Services: An Economic Approach’ (2022) EJRR 12, 14 with reference to S Rose-Ackerman, “Regulation and the law of tort” (1991) 81 American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings 54. See C D Kolstad, T S Ulen and G V Johnson, “Ex post liability for harm versus ex ante safety regulation: substitutes or complements?” (1990) 80 American Economic Review 888; and P Burrows, “Combining regulation and legal liability for the control of external costs” (1999) 19 International Review of Law and Economics 227.

16 F Cafaggi, “The Regulatory Functions of Transnational Commercial Contracts. New architectures” (2013) 36 Fordham International Law Journal, 1557. A lot of the literature regarding transnational private governance regards sustainability:

F Cafaggi, “Regulation through contracts: Supply-chain contracting and sustainability standards” (2016) ERCL 12 218; A Claire Cutler & T Dietz, The Politics of Private Transnational Governance by Contract (Routledge 2017).

17 Compare the extensive literature on global value chains, in which there is often a lead firm. A model that is now taken over by the platform model: J Salminen, K Sobel-Read, M Viljanen & K Eller, “Digital Platforms as Second-Order Lead Firms: Beyond the Industrial/Digital Divide in Regulating Value Chains” (2022) 6 ERPL, 1, 1059, 20, 1–30.

18 Art 3 (11) MSR, continues: “.without having ownership of the products involved, excluding postal services as defined in point 1 of Article 2 of Directive 97/67/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council (31), parcel delivery services as defined in point 2 of Article 2 of Regulation (EU) 2018/644 of the European Parliament and of the Council (32), and any other postal services or freight transport services.”

19 Art 4(1) and 4(3) MSR. See also European Commission, The “Blue Guide” on the implementation of EU product rules 2022 (2022/C 247/01) 44.

20 Art 4(3)(a-d) MSR.

21 Art 4(4) MSR. Including the postal address.

22 Art 4(2)(d) MSR.

23 Art 4(5) MSR (consolidated version 02019R1020-20240218): Regulation (EU) No 305/2011 (construction products), (EU) 2016/425 (personal protective equipment) and (EU) 2016/426 (gas appliances), Regulation (EU) 2023/1542 (batteries), Directives 2000/14/EC (noise emission outdoors), 2006/42/EC (machinery), 2009/48/EC (toys), 2009/125/EC (ecologic design energy related products), 2011/65/EU (hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment), 2013/29/EU (pyrotechnic equipment), 2013/53/EU (recreational craft), 2014/29/EU (pressure vessels), 2014/30/EU (electromagnetic compatibility), 2014/31/EU (non-automatic weighing instruments), 2014/32/EU (measuring equipment), 2014/34/EU (ATEX), 2014/35/EU (low voltage), 2014/53/EU (radio equipment) and 2014/68/EU (pressure equipment).

24 Commission, ‘Proposal for a Regulation (.) laying down rules and procedures for compliance with and enforcement of Union harmonization legislation on products (…)’, COM(2017) 795 final.

25 COM(2017) 795 final. It was a follow-up of a previous proposal that got stuck in May 2016 because of discussions over inclusion of an origin marking: Commission, “Proposal for a Regulation on market surveillance of products (.),” COM(2013) 75 final; Klindt, Produktsicherheitsgesetz (3. Auflage, Beck 2021) Rn. 35–36.

26 See: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/HIS/?uri=celex:32019R1020; ST 8438 2019 INIT, Council of European Union, Interinstitutional File 2017/0353(COD), Brussels, 30 April 2019; 9429/19 ADD 1, Council of the European Union, Brussels, 29 May 2019, Interinstitutional File: 2017/0353(COD). European Commission, Technopolis Group et al, “Ex-Post Evaluation of the Application of the Market Surveillance Provisions of Regulation (EC) No 765/2008” (2017), Ref. Ares(2017)6223236 – 19/12/2017, p 101. As also noted by C Ullrich, “New Approach meets new economy: Enforcing EU product safety in e-commerce” (2019) 26 MJ 5, 558–84, 570. Recital 13 MSR.

27 Unlike the EC, that advocated a wide interpretation of importer under the old MSR: Commission Notice, The “Blue Guide” on the implementation of EU products rules 2016 (2016/C 272/01), 27.7.2016, 20.

28 T Lenz, Produkthaftung (NJW Praxis, Verlag C.H. Beck 2022), §8, Rn. 40, with reference to T Lenz, “Die Auswirkungen der (neuen) Marktüberwachungs-Verordnung für Unternehmer” (2020) BB 707, 708. See para 1, 2 and 18 of the recitals of the MSR.

29 See also the Model Decision under the New Legislative Framework, which serves as a model for sector specific EU product legislation: Decision No 768/2008/EC of 9 July 2008 on a common framework for the marketing of products, and repealing Council Decision 93/465/EEC (model decision), para 19, Art 1(2) and annex I, art. R1-R5. Compare also the GPSD hereafter and the old “due care” requirement for distributors in Art 5(2) GPSD.

30 The discussion on the theoretic substantiation of the personal scope of product safety law in literature is limited. See for the content and systematic choices in product safety law, but less on the justifications of personal scope: Ch Hodges, European Regulation of Consumer Product Safety (Oxford University Press 2005); D Fairgrieve & R Goldberg, Product Liability (Oxford University Press 2020), 857–82. Compare for product liability the seminal work of J Stapleton, Product Liability (Butterworths 1999) regarding economic and non-economic theories that could explain product liability, but – as she points out – do not provide a sound and/or uniform justification of the current system. Compare G Wagner, Münchener Kommentar zum Bürgerlichen Gesetzbuch 9 (Beck 2024), § 4 ProdHaftG, para 43 and 52 regarding the various operators in the supply chain and their role; importers were assumed to be able to take out insurance for the product liability risk and/or be able to transfer an increase in risk in to product prices (loss spreading/redistribution). At the same time, too much recourse was assumed to lead to higher product prices, hence why importer liability used to be stricter than distributor or supplier liability, both in product safety as well as product liability (compare II.3).

31 Para 13 of the recitals of the MSR. See for critical remarks: Veldt 2023a, para IV.2.

32 Compare ECJ Case C-16/16P Commission/Belgium, ECLI:EU:C:2018:79. See also J C A van Dam, Guidance documents of the European Commission in the Dutch Legal Order (PhD thesis of Leiden University 2020) 29–30.

33 Commission notice, Guidelines for economic operators and market surveillance authorities on the practical implementation of Article 4 of Regulation (EU) 2019/1020 on market surveillance and compliance of products, OJ EU 2021 C100/1 (hereafter: Guidelines on implementation), 12.

34 Guidelines on implementation, p 13.

35 Art 4(2)(a-c) MSR.

36 Guidelines on implementation, p 12.

37 C Busch, “Rethinking Product Liability Rules for Online Marketplaces: A Comparative Perspective” [Draft – July 31, 2021], TPRC49: The 49th Research Conference on Communication, Information and Internet Policy, Posted on SSRN on 2 Aug 2021, https://papers.ssrncom/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3897602, 7. See also Ulfbeck & Verbruggen 2022 [supra note 1] p 4.

38 Art 6(3) Regulation (EU) 2022/2065 (DSA).

39 Art 3 MSR and also the Guidelines on implementation of Art 4, p 12.

40 Directive 2001/95/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 3 December 2001 on general product safety [2001] OJ L 11/4 (GPSD). See for an extensive analysis of the GPSD in the pre ecommerce era, already pointing at territoriality problems: Hodges 2005 [supra note 30], pp 71, 74–84. See also D Fairgrieve & G Howells, ‘General Product Safety – a Revolution Through Reform’ (2006) The Modern Law Review 69, 59–69 and Fairgrieve & Goldberg 2020 [nr31], 865–82.

41 Para 8 recitals GPSR.

42 SWD (2021) 169 (executive summary), SWD (2021) 168 (impact assessment report). They are not named as economic operator effected on page 63, SWD(2021) 168.

43 SWD (2021) 168 (impact assessment report), p 15, 16, 23, 50, and p 73, 139 and 140.

44 COM(2021) 346 final; Directive 2001/95/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 3 December 2001 on general product safety.

45 Art 3(12) GPSR.

46 Art 3(13) GPSR.

47 Art 16(1) GPSR in conjunction with Art 4(2) and (3) MSR. Although the GPSR holds specific obligations for each operator (Art 9–13), it refers to the MSR-cascade and corresponding obligations in Art 16 GPSR to which it adds obligations.

48 Art 16(2) GPSR in conjunction with Art 9(2), (5), (6) and (7) of the GPSR. Compare Art 4(3) MSR.

49 Art 35(1) GPSR in conjunction with Art 4(3)(d) MSR.

50 Art 37 GPSR. This EO is not always the same entity as the seller under the consumer sales contract.

51 For an overview: G Straetmans & D Verhoeven, “Product Liability directive. Section V,” in: D Fairgrieve, G Howells et al. (eds), European Product Liability. An Analysis of the State of the Art in the Era of New Technologies (2016 Intersentia) 97–103.

52 At the time of submission, the PLD EP-1 was the final legislative document available, hence why reference is made to both the article numbers of the PLDp as well as the PLD EP-1. The final numbering will depend on the Councils response which is expected in September 2024. See legislative file: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/HIS/?uri=CELEX:52022PC0495.

53 This includes the person substantively modifying a product, see Art 7(3) PLDp and Art 8(2) PLD-EP 1.

54 Art 7(3) PLDp and Art 8(1)(c)(i) and (ii) PLDp.

55 Art 7(4) PLDp and Art 8(1)(c)(iii) PLD EP-1. See also Ch Twigg-Flesner, “Guiding Principles for Updating the Product Liability Directive for the Digital Age” (ELI Innovation Paper Series, Pilot Innovation Paper 2021) 7.

56 Art 7(5)(a) and (b) in conjunction with Art 7(2) and 7(3) PLDp and Art 8(3)(a) and (b) PLD EP-1 in conjunction with Art 8(1) PLD EP-1.

57 Art 7(6) PLDp and Art 8(4) PLD EP-1.

58 Veldt 2023a [supra n 8] para IV.5.

59 Regarding loss spreading as justification, see Stapleton 1994 [supra n 30], 163–216.

60 As assumed by Busch 2021 [supra n 37], 35–37.

61 F Cafaggi, “The Regulatory Functions of Transnational Commercial Contracts. New architectures” (2013) 36 Fordham International Law Journal, 1557. With regard to food: F Cafaggi and P Iamiceli, “Supply chains, contractual governance and certification regimes” (2014) 37 European Journal of Law Economics, 131, 170.

62 See in general: C van Dam, European Tort Law (Oxford University Press 2013) 298.

63 Compare from the U.S. perspective CM Sharkey, “Products Liability in the Digital Age: Online Platforms as ‘Cheapest Cost Avoiders’” (2022) 73 Hastings L.J. 1327 and previously Busch 2021 [supra n 37], 35–38; see also Ulfbeck & Verbruggen 2022 [supra n 1], 13.

64 C Wendehorst, J Borghetti and B Koch 2022 [supra n 8], 14–17.

65 Compare: Salminen e.a. 2022 [supra n 17]; M Schaub, “Oude, nieuwe en toekomstige verplichtingen voor online marktplaatsen” (2022) Tijdschrift voor Consumentenrecht en Handelspraktijken, 257, 263 with regard to terms and conditions in the seller-platform relationship.

66 Center for Strategic & Evaluation Services (CSES), No. 887/PP/GRO/IMA/20/1133/11700 (External AI-report), 1, 15; Annex 2, IA SWD(2022) 316, p 64.

67 Annex 2, IA SWD(2022) 316, p 75; External IA-report, p 15.

68 For figures, see External IA-report, p 150, table 4.12.

69 External IA-report, p 57.

70 External IA-report, p 106, table 3.1 and notes 264 and 265, p 142, table 4.9.

71 External IA-report, p 151.

72 External IA-report, p 152.

73 External IA-report, p 304.

74 T R Tyler, “Procedural Justice, Legitimacy, and the Effective Rule of Law” (2003) 30 Crime and Justice 283, 302. See for more literature: M Rorie & N Schell-Busey, “Corporate Crime Deterrence,” in B van Rooij, D D Sokol (eds), The Cambridge Handbook of Compliance (Cambridge University Press 2021), 219–35, 224 and 227.

75 B van Rooij, D D Sokol, “Compliance as the Interaction between Rules and Behavior,” in Van Rooij & Sokol 2021 [supra n 74], 4; N Rangone, “Making Law Effective: Behavioural Insights into Compliance” (2018) 9 EJRR 483; M E Kuiper, M Chambon, A De Bruijn, C Folmer, E Olthuis, M Brownlee, E Kooistra, A Fine, A., F Van Harreveld, G Lunansky & B van Rooij, “A network approach to compliance: A complexity science understanding of how rules shape behavior” (2022) Journal of Business Ethics: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-022-05128-8. See also F Blanc, “Tools for Effective Regulation: Is ‘More’ Always ‘Better’?” (2018) 9 EJRR 465, 470, fig. 1.

76 Van Rooij & Brownlee 2021 referring to S McCrary, J W Swanson, “Physicians’ Legal Defensiveness and Knowledge of Medical Law: Comparing Denmark and the USA” (1999) 27 Scandinavian Journal of Public Health, 18. Compare NL: S Wiznitzer, Defensieve doctors (PhD thesis Utrecht, BoomJuridisch 2021).

77 B van Rooij and M Brownlee, “Does tort law deter?” in; Van Rooij & Sokol 2021 [supra n 74] 311–25, 321.

78 On why semi-structured interviews may be key regarding the “why” and “how” of compliance: M C Pautz, S R Rinfret, “Engaging Qualitative Research Approaches to Investigate Compliance Motivations: Understanding the How and Why of Compliance,” in M Rorie, B van Rooij, Measuring Compliance (Cambridge University Press 2022), 187.

79 Who had a colleague present.

80 Also because the Netherlands are a logistic service hub, with the Rotterdam Port being one of the biggest points of entry on the European market for products: https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/IP_07_537.

81 Regarding expert interviews in compliance, Pautz & Rinfret 2022, 11.3.2.

82 Only one multinational indicated also to perform services for online marketplaces directly, interview E. We decided not to include more input on the FBP-model and/or online platforms and their legal staff in this particular project, partially because it was very hard to recruit platforms as respondents.

83 Compare M Rorie, B van Rooij, ‘Quantitative Approaches to Measuring Corporate Compliance’, in M Rorie B van Rooij, Measuring Compliance (Cambridge University Press 2022).

84 A Strauss & J M Corbin, Basics of qualitative research: Grounded theory procedures and techniques (Sage Publications 1990), Chapter 8–10.

85 Compare S Brinkmann, S Kvale, InterViews. Learning the craft of Qualitative Research Interviewing (Sage Publishing 2015) 229.

86 Code groups: 1. Services & 3. Business model, 2 Knowledge, 4 Risk measures, 5. Room for negotiation, 6. Personal data, 7. Role and liability risk, 8. Insurance and 9. product costs, 10. Role platform.

87 B Saunders et al., Saturation in qualitative research: exploring its conceptualization and operationalization, (2018) Qual Quant 52(4),1893–907.

88 Code group 1 & 3; SQ 2.A and B.

89 Interview D, 27–43 and 103–109.

90 Interview I regarding a small provider,

91 Interview C regarding a bigger provider. Some of the bigger companies also provide repairs, relabelling, assemblage and return handling of e-commerce-orders. This regards mostly the right of return of consumers; safety issues are not specifically checked: Interview A, p 19 and Interview B, p 16–18 regarding returns, also p 26; Interview C, 37. Interview D, 54–117. One also administrated the type of returns (A to C, especially whether the product was used or not), which may result blacklisting certain buyers, Interview D, 72–99.

92 They asked their clients to arrange representation elsewhere (Interview C, 295–363), also confirming that most authorized representatives under the MDR are special purpose vehicles/empty shells, 320. Interview A (lawyer), p 4–6 indicated that multiple logistic service providers in MD-context are investigating being an authorized representative, because it is a great competitive advantage.

93 Interview F, 70; Interview G; Interview H. Compare: interview D; Interview C; Interview B. At the same time, one respondent declares that they receive a lot of mail addressed to sellers p/a FSP regarding packages that are delivered at the FSPs premises, including invoices for import and custom duties that it does not open because these are not meant for the FSP (‘there are a lot of loose ends’), Interview F, 58–62.

94 Interview B, p 8; Interview C, 37 and 724–26; Interview D, 54–117 and 251–73; Interview F and 7.2 and Interview H, 59. With the exception of interview E.

95 To that extent, FSPs sometimes receive an Application Programming Interface (API)-key from the platform, provided by the seller, so that the software of the platform is connected to the warehouse management system of the FSP to receive the orders placed at the seller through the platform, Interview F, 27–38; Interview H, 27, 33–36. Warehouse management software might be bought at third parties (in which case they sometimes work at order fee basis) or it may be developed by the FSP itself, Interview F, 54–57 and Interview H, 30–31. Some brand owners products may also be send directly from the FSP-warehouse to the platforms-warehouses, to be cross-docked to combine orders, but in these cases there still is no explicit contract between the FSP and the platform, Interview D, 148. The same applies if transport is provided or intermediated by the platform (like ‘verzenden via bol.com’), in which case the FSP places an address sticker which mentions the platform on the package and gives it to a transport company assigned by the seller/platform, Interview H, 184–88.

96 Only one respondent declared to work for platforms directly, Interview E, 65–71 and 80. We have asked the respondents if they know how the platforms have organized their logistic services. They indicate that Zalando uses subcontractors for its warehousing and logistic services, bol.com as well (Logistiek via bol.com), Amazon has its own warehouses, Interview D, 150–83.

97 Interview E, 454; Interview F, 19; Interview H, 78–80; Interview J, 124–42.

98 Interview J, 142; Interview D, 260; Interview H, 78.

99 Interview D, 123.

100 Interview F, 17–19; Interview G; Interview H, 18.

101 Interview F 19–21: “That was the beginning of 2021, the end of 2020, so that is really the corona lockdown. Everyone was terribly busy and you could actually…. We had looked for a few parties, but well, they said: ‘Hey, if you don’t do 1000 orders then there’s no point in talking.” And then I thought: yes, but wait a minute! So there are a lot of people who are looking for this and who have the same problems. So let’s just set up a website and since then, yes, we have actually been very busy and then the phone rings. And people want to become customers. [Interviewer]: Yes, and what type of customers are they, do they all come from the Netherlands or elsewhere? [Person 1]: No, they are mainly Dutch young e-commerce/bol.com entrepreneurs, so that is really the typical target group that we work with, you know.” And Interview H, 18.

102 Interview F, 77: ‘[interviewer]: Are there any sellers that you refuse? [Person:] Well so far, we have chosen to …. from the mission and vision that we have. We stand, so to speak, for “Creating Freedom” and based on that mission and vision we have decided not to do that. So, we say: Everyone is welcome, even if you place one order. And so, we also offer young entrepreneurs the opportunity to grow and we see very positive results from that. For example, people who started with one or two orders and who now run a multi-million-dollar business. Those people are also grateful to us. They ultimately choose a different solution because we no longer fit their volume. [Interviewer]: Okay, so when people get too big they often go elsewhere? [Person 1]: Yes. [Interviewer]: And who do you lose them to? What type of company? [Person 1]: [a platform].” Also Interview H, 183.

103 Interview D, 123. Through the EDI-connection, the seller/e-retailers software is connected to the warehouse management systems of the FSP. Bigger e-retailers use advanced Enterprise Resource Planning-software themselves (compare the API-key for smaller FSPs).

104 Except for interview H, 86 who was storing some books for a non-EU seller.

105 Interview F, 72-75 (because of automated invoicing); Interview H, 87–90. Only the consultant declared to have refused a Chinese party because he/she/them thought the company was not trustworthy and was asking to provide services that were “dodgy,” Interview J, 159.

106 Interview H, 102–108 even indicates finding it “unfair” that Chinese products/sellers are copycatting products of European sellers against lower prices. See also Interview J, 160.

107 Interview D, 308–342 and 457–78.

108 Interview J, 166–81.

109 Code group 2; SQ 7.

110 Interview B, p 5; Interview C, 81–118 and 502–23; interview E, 130–49 (although not so accurate regarding the application the FBP-model 151–56). The external legal advisors were all accurate.

111 Interview E, 253–81 that regarded legal staff from a holding company, whereas the contracts with sellers and platforms were concluded at daughter level.

112 Interview F, Interview H, 110 (although responding later that he/she/them knew the content of the regulation, 114, which was probably a socially desirable answer). As confirmed by consultant in interview I.

113 Interview F; Interview G; Interview H, 240.

114 Interview A, p 11–12; Interview I, 328–40, who points out that in Germany there is some awareness, but the risk of liability is underestimated; Interview J, 53–59.

115 Interview B, p 7; Interview C 149; Interview E, 130–149. One of the external legal advisors also heard about the MSR from EC, DG Grow directly but states ‘I think the people who know about this provision can be counted on one hand’, Interview A, p 11–12.

116 Interview F and 7.2, 24; Interview H, 230. Interview G, 65: 8000–9000 users.

117 Interview C, 137–149; Interview J, 103–110 and 182–83.

118 Interview F, 101.

119 Interview F, 115–117.

120 Code group 4, 5 and 6; SQ 1, 3, 4.

121 Interview A, p 3; Interview B, p 6–7, and Interview C, 246; Interview D, 297. Interview F 72-75; the director manually checks the Chamber of Commerce registrations. Interview H, 278 also checks the chamber of commerce.

122 Interview E, 336–39, 362, 370, which is assumed, but needs to be further checked. Measures are a matter of further implementation (interview was taken in spring 2023).

123 Interview H, 85–87. Interview F, 156 indicates that they have been approached by Chinese sellers but that it has never come to an agreement. One respondent indicates that they do not want to facilitate trade from outside the EU because this ruins the market for EU-sellers (being also an EU-seller himself), Interview H, 282.

124 Just one regarding the import of books (very small numbers), Interview H, 86.

125 Interview B, p 18–19; Interview C, 371–76 and 387.

126 Interview C, 242–63.

127 Interview D, 356; Interview E, 287 and 303–30.

128 Interview A, 7–8; Interview B, p 7–8 and 11 indicates that contractual implementation takes time; interview C, 268–94 uses the clauses as a safety net; interview E, 253–62 indicates that he/she/them does not know whether the contracts have been adjusted, but strongly suspects that this is not the case.

129 Interview C, 401.

130 Interview C, 276.

131 Interview C, 285–94, and 371–76, based on notifications from the existing ISO-quality management system in place and the AEO-permit (customs).

132 Interview C, 535.

133 Interview C, 407; interview E, 290 and 331.

134 Interview C, 705; Interview E, 298.

135 Interview H, 151.

136 Interview H, 237–42; interview F, 194.

137 Interview H, 223–30.

138 Interview B, p 15; Interview C, 235; Interview E, 168. One legal advisor also sees this in contracts between FSPs and sellers, Interview J, 14–156.

139 Interview E, 169.

140 Interview A, p 20; Interview I, 475–78.

141 Interview D, 25; Interview E, 116 and 122, and 388–90.

142 Interview C, 401.

143 Interview E, 88. Interview D, 495–96.

144 Interview D, 347–60 and 409–21; Interview E, 122; Interview F, 179–90 reinsurance obligations.

145 Interview E, 177.

146 Interview E, 390.

147 Interview A and interview I, 594–668.

148 Interview H, 179.

149 Interview F, 179.

150 Interview A, 19–20; Interview B, p 18–19; Interview C, 545–78; Interview D, 498–537 indicated that for MDR purposes they do have higher traceability requirements which they apply; Interview E, 416–30 does not know exactly; Interview H, 208–22.

151 Interview F, 221–33.

152 Code group 7: SQ 6, 8 and 9.

153 Interview H, 264–76.

154 Interview E, 156 and 446: ’Yes, of course something like this can happen, but I think you especially run that risk if you have those AliExpress companies, for example. Yeah, I don’t think we have that.’

155 Interview F, 118–25 and 195–96, 295. As confirmed by advisor in interview A, p 9, stating that FSPs are not aware of the liability risk, which is therefore not converted into product prices.

156 Interview H, 120 and 147–49; Interview G, 10. Platform policy is confirmed by interview J, 190–220 and interview G, 5–6.

157 Interview I, 328–40.

158 Interview B, p 41; Interview C, 294; Interview E, 551.

159 Interview C, 376. Interview D, 189 indicates that this information sometimes should be retrievable through the order info. Interview F, 168–75 and 194, also indicates that authorities will immediately go to the seller. Interview H, 136: “my customer buys it and sells it on the platform, so it is not [sold] under my name,

160 Interview H, 189–206.

161 Interview A, p 11 (and 15–16) indicates authorities are not enforcing; Interview B, p 15; Interview C, 487–99; interview H, 231–36.

162 Interview D, 375–402. Compare interview H, 257–262 who had a police visit because of other reasons.

163 Interview C, 763.

164 Interview E, 432–36.

165 Interview I, 300–22 and 670–714.

166 Interview C, 582–624; Interview E, 500. Only one external advisor anticipated the extension in the PLDp, interview A, 14.

167 Interview C, 582–624.

168 Interview D, 366. The consultant explains that shipping products in parts is sometimes a model by which certain sellers try to avoid compliance with LVD-directive for example, interview J, 116.

169 Interview E, 492. See also interview A, p 12–13.

170 Interview B, p 14 ‘We don’t deal in compliance’; Interview D, 409–21.

171 Interview A, p 16–17; interview B, p 5–6; Interview C, 154–56, also (106, 118–25) “we do not know what is in the package.”

172 Interview D, 311; interview E, 446.

173 Interview B, p 17–18; Interview D, 356; Interview F, 194 and 200. Interview G 59–61; Interview H, 123–32 and 133–36, also indicates (128) that he/she/them does refuse certain batteries in his warehouse because of safety risks, apparently more because of risk of fire. Interview H 311–16.

174 Interview H, 136–140 and 162–63.

175 Interview H, 317–24.

176 Interview F, 298–305; Interview G, 61.

177 Interview G, 59–61.

178 Code group 8 and 9; SQ 5. We only included info on insurance of FSP.

179 Interview C, 624–56; Interview E, 518–30; Interview H, 243–56. Compare under V.I regarding the MDR and insurance regarding the authorized representative.

180 Interview C, 624–56.

181 Interview F, 261 and Interview H, 243–56.

182 Interview C, 705; Interview F, 194.

183 Interview F, 194. Interview D, 356 says that PL-cover is irrelevant, because of liability of the seller.

184 Interview E, 515.

185 Category 10.

186 Interview J, 264–82 and 287–303.

187 Interview F, 39–57, 248 and 257, Interview G, 8–10, Interview H, 37–54 and interview J, 297–303.

188 Interview J 297–303.

189 Interview F, 104.

190 Interview I, 200–207.

191 Recital 25 MSR, first part.

192 Recital 25 MSR, continuation. See also Regulation (EU) 2019/515 on the mutual recognition of goods (OJ L 91, 29.3.2019, p 1). https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/single-market/goods/free-movement-sectors/mutual-recognition-goods/product-contact-points_en.

193 Searching the RVO.nl website for “fulfilment” does not give any additional information. On the “ondernemingsplein,” which is part of the website of the Dutch chamber of commerce, one may only find information on authorized representatives: https://ondernemersplein.kvk.nl/productveiligheid-en-de-rol-van-een-gemachtigde/.

194 However, biases and noise influence information processing in risk assessment: compare J de Wit, W Pieters and P van Gelder, “Bias and noise in security risk assessments, an empirical study on the information position and confidence of security professionals” (2023) Security Journal 37(1), 170-191, with reference to A Tversky & D Kahneman, “Extensional versus intuitive reasoning: The conjunction fallacy in probability judgment” (2008) Reasoning: Studies of human inference and its foundations, 114–35.

195 For example, expressed lack of capacity or bounded ethicality (self-justifying unethical behavior), Y Feldman & Y Kaplan, “Behavioral Ethics as Compliance,” in Van Rooij and Sokol 2021 [supra n 74], 50–62. Also, unfairness perceptions regarding the law could stand in the way of action by FSPs, compare Y Feldman, “Five models of Regulatory Compliance Motivations: Empirical Findings and Normative implications,” in: D Levi-Faur, Handbook on the Politics of Regulation (2011 Edward Elgar Publishing) 335–46, 338, with reference to K M Carlsmith et al., “Why do we punish? Deterrence and just deserts as motives for punishment” (2002) Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 83(2), 284–99 a.o. However, exposing actors to external motivation might undermine their internal motivation, see Feldman 2011, 341–42 and the seminal work of Deci & Ryan, see overview in R M Ryan & E L Deci, “Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivations: Classic Definitions and New Directions” (2000) Contemporary Educational Psychology 25, 54–67.

196 Deterrence is always limited, but no deterrence at all remains undesirable, see Rorie & Schell-Busey 2021 [supra n 74], 223, 227. See for nuances re enforcement: F Blanc, “Tools for Effective Regulation: Is ‘More’ Always ‘Better’?” (2018) EJRR (9)(3) 465–82. Psychology research shows that external rewards might undermine compliance and self-regulations, ibid. Punishment may also interact with people’s capacity to comply, in that it may be ineffective for people who do not know the rules, J M Darley et al. “The ex-ante function of the criminal law” (2001) Law and Society Review, 35(1), 165–90.

197 Product liability and product safety are forms of market governance instead of relational governance such as the CSDDD, Salminen e.a. 2022 [supra n 17], 14–15.

198 Compare Rangone 2018, 487. At the same time, the FSP-study is only self-reporting and perception research.

199 Directive (EU) 2024/1760 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 June 2024 on corporate sustainability due diligence and amending Directive (EU) 2019/1937 and Regulation (EU) 2023/2859 [2024] OJ L 1760. Compare Salminen e.a. 2022 [supra n 17], 14–15.

200 See doctrinally Veldt 2023b [supra n 1], 378 and Borghetti 2023 [supra n 10], 163. However, mentioning the 0FSP is not obligatory under the MSR in case of an EU-seller.

201 Art. 16 Directive 2012/19/EU (waste electrical and electronic equipment).

202 Para 32, Art 2(28), 4 and Chapter 3 of Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (Eco-design); Commission, Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the safety of toys and repealing Directive 2009/48/EC (Eco-design directive), COM(2023) 462 final, recital 40–44 and Art 7(2)(a).

203 Compare G Wagner, Münchener Kommentar zum Bürgerlichen Gesetzbuch (Beck 2020), § 4 ProdHaftG, para 43, as mentioned by Busch 2021 [supra n 34], 13. Compare Stapleton 1994 [supra n 30] and recently Borghetti 2023 [supra n 10] who advocates stricter distributor liability.

204 See extensively Salminen e.a. 2022 [supra n 17], 18.

205 Which could constitute “authority or control,” see recital 23 and Art 6(3) DSA.

206 Regulation (EU) 2019/1150 (P2B). See also Salminen e.a. 2022 [supra n 17] 17 and the DSA Transparancy Database with “statements of reason” re content moderation decisions: https://transparency.dsa.ec.europa.eu/statement.

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