Install
openclaw skills install @leooooooow/hijack-defenderDetect, document, and remove unauthorized third-party sellers hijacking your Amazon listings or ecommerce product pages — with step-by-step enforcement workflows for brand registry, cease-and-desist, and test buy procedures.
openclaw skills install @leooooooow/hijack-defenderListing hijacking happens when an unauthorized seller attaches to your Amazon ASIN (or copies your product page on other marketplaces) and sells counterfeit, unauthorized, or gray-market goods under your brand name. It destroys customer trust, tanks your reviews, and can get your listing suppressed when Amazon receives complaints about products you didn't sell. This skill walks you through detecting hijackers, documenting the violation, submitting enforcement actions, and preventing future attacks.
| Decision | Strong | Acceptable | Weak |
|---|---|---|---|
| Detection method | Automated monitoring + daily alerts | Weekly manual checks | Reactive (noticing after damage is done) |
| Evidence standard | Test buy + photos + invoices vs. yours | Photos only | Screenshots only |
| Enforcement route | Amazon Brand Registry IP report | Case to Seller Support | Public seller feedback only |
| Cease-and-desist | Attorney-reviewed template | DIY template | Verbal warning only |
| Time to action | Within 24h of detection | 2–3 days | Week+ |
| Prevention | Transparency program + brand registry | Brand registry only | No proactive measures |
Before a hijacker appears, set up automated detection:
Set a monitoring cadence: daily for high-volume ASINs, weekly for slower-moving products.
When a new seller appears, classify the violation type:
Check the seller's other listings, feedback history, and location (many hijackers are overseas sellers with new accounts).
A test buy is the strongest evidence for enforcement. Order the hijacker's product:
Test buys cost money but are often required for Amazon counterfeit enforcement and cease-and-desist legal actions.
Compile the following before submitting any enforcement action:
Go to: brand.amazon.com → Report a Violation:
Amazon typically reviews IP reports within 1–5 business days. Counterfeit reports backed by test buys are resolved fastest.
In parallel with the Brand Registry report, send a C&D to the hijacker:
If Amazon's initial enforcement action is rejected or delayed:
After removing the hijacker, close the loop:
Situation: Brand selling proprietary phone cases at $24.99. Monitoring alert triggers: 3 new sellers appear on the listing, all pricing at $14.99–16.99.
Detection: Seller profiles show all 3 created within the last 60 days, ship from the same region, and have nearly identical feedback text.
Test buy result: Products arrive with slightly different packaging, no authenticity card, logo color slightly off, and packaging material noticeably cheaper. Clearly counterfeit.
Evidence package:
Outcome: Amazon Brand Registry report submitted → All 3 sellers removed within 72 hours. Amazon's Counterfeit Crimes Unit notified due to coordinated nature of attack.
Prevention added: Amazon Transparency codes applied to all future production runs.
Situation: Brand sells through 12 authorized retailers. An unauthorized seller appears on Amazon listing at $31.99 — 25% below MAP of $42.99.
Investigation: Seller has 4-year history and positive feedback — clearly an unauthorized but legitimate reseller, not a counterfeiter. Likely purchased through a distributor or liquidator.
Action taken:
Outcome: Seller removed offer within 5 days after receiving the message. Supply chain leak identified and closed by amending distributor agreement to include resale restrictions.
Note: Amazon does not enforce MAP directly. Enforcement must come through seller communication and supply chain control — not Brand Registry IP reports (MAP violations alone are not a trademark issue).
Reporting without evidence. Amazon rejects vague reports. You need ASIN, seller ID, specific violation type, and ideally a test buy or trademark registration.
Waiting too long to act. Hijackers who hold the Buy Box for weeks can generate enough bad reviews to permanently damage your listing's conversion rate.
Confusing MAP violations with counterfeit enforcement. Amazon doesn't enforce MAP. If an unauthorized reseller is selling authentic goods below MAP, your enforcement path is through seller communication and supply chain control — not trademark reports.
Using your brand account for test buys. Amazon can see who placed the order. Use a separate personal account.
Ignoring the supply chain leak. If a legitimate reseller is selling your product without authorization, finding and closing the supply chain leak is more important than the removal itself. Otherwise the inventory keeps appearing.
Not following up after initial removal. Many hijackers simply return after removal. Monitor the listing for 30 days post-action and be ready to re-file.
Skipping cease-and-desist for counterfeit sellers. For overseas counterfeiters, a legal letter may not be effective — but it creates a paper trail needed if you escalate to Amazon's Counterfeit Crimes Unit or pursue legal action.
Ignoring review damage from the hijack. After removing the hijacker, check recent reviews for complaints about product quality that were about counterfeit units. You may be able to request Amazon review removal for reviews about products you didn't sell.
Not enrolling in Amazon Transparency. It's the only truly preventive solution for Amazon counterfeiting. Without it, hijackers can always return.
Assuming one report is enough for repeat offenders. Organized counterfeit operations create new seller accounts regularly. Sustained monitoring and repeat reporting is necessary until they give up.