3 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Online Shopping

E-commerce giants of the late ’90s and early ’00s like Amazon and eBay changed how the world shopped. Some of those companies have stuck around, but a new generation of commerce platforms is quickly gaining ground. Ultracheap retailers like Temu, Shein, and AliExpress are winning over customers, luring them in with bargain bin prices on products shipped directly from manufacturers in China. Shopping has also become a core part of business for social media companies — your TikTok feed is both a stream of videos and an endless shelf of products for sale. The Verge’s online shopping section covers how and what we buy and the forces driving this sprawling and opaque market.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
The former CEO of Abercrombie & Fitch has been arrested.

Mike Jeffries, the longtime head of the mall fashion brand, has been charged with sex trafficking. Multiple men say they were sexually exploited at events held by Jeffries and associates, according to a BBC investigation.

A&F has an unsavory history involving racism and discrimination, recently chronicled in a 2022 documentary. Even so, business has been booming for the company in recent years.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Evan Vucci, I’m so sorry.

The Associated Press chief photographer took the indelible photo of Donald Trump right after an assassination attempt that’s since been used (without permission) on everything from cheap t-shirts to digital icons.

$100,000 Trump-themed watches is apparently going too far: AP, which owns the rights to the image, told Wired it sent a cease and desist to the company making the unauthorized timepieces.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
“The Man Who Made Nike Uncool” is out.

Nike is moving on from CEO John Donahoe less than a week after Bloomberg published its unflatteringly-titled profile of his four-year tenure.

Under Donahoe, Nike de-emphasized retail stores to chase direct sales, flooded the market with retros like the Panda Dunks, and put the RTFKT NFT shoe brand on the same level as the Swoosh and Jordan Jumpman.

Today’s announcement doesn’t include the RTFKT logo.

Nike brand logos on a black background, showing the Swoosh, the Jordan Jumpman, the Converse star, and some wacky lightning bolt for the NFT shoe brand RTFKT.
One of these logos doesn’t belong in this list, but Nike put it there anyway.
Image: Nike
Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Samsung targets Gen Z fashion lovers.

Wildly popular fashion designer Sandy Liang designed a Galaxy Z Flip 6 phone case and sent the device to influencers during New York Fashion Week.

Flip phones are experiencing something of a tech Renaissance among young people. This collaboration hits on the nostalgia and trendy aesthetics — but will it make anyone ditch their iPhone?

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
New York’s fashion industry continues to shrink.

A new study found the number of people working in fashion in the city has dropped by nearly 30 percent since 2014 — just as Fashion Week kicks off on Friday.

The US fashion industry has been declining for decades, but companies like Shein and Temu threaten it even further. I recently discussed the rise of ultra fast fashion on Slate’s What Next podcast.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Etsy is launching an SEO tool.

The platform’s Search Visibility Page tells sellers what they should update in their product listings to improve their position in the on-platform search — an important way for sellers to get in front of buyers. That might mean adding a return policy, swapping out a product image, or changing shipping cost.

Seller Handbook

[www.etsy.com]

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
eBay rolls out revamped search pages.

The site’s search pages now feature larger product images with rounded edges, redesigned dropdown menus, and a new shopping view that eliminates ads from the sidebar.

Image: eBay
Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Let’s play a game.

Scroll through the pictures below and try to match each desk chair with the platform it’s for sale on: Amazon, AliExpress, or Shein.

The correct answer doesn’t really matter — as John Herrman writes, this is the state of online shopping, where products that look the same are for sale everywhere, often at different prices or by different sellers. Everywhere you look, products are cheap, fast, and anonymous.

A beige armless desk chair in a non-descript interior space.
Another beige armless desk chair in a nondescript interior space.
Another beige armless desk chair in a slightly different nondescript interior space.
1/3
Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Shein products are getting more expensive.

Prices are rising as Shein eyes IPOs in the UK and the US. The average price of a dress is up 28 percent in the US compared to a year ago, for example.

Despite labor violations and the overall secrecy of the company, business is booming for the fast fashion brand. We’ll see if shoppers mind the slightly higher prices.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Shein sales last year surpassed Zara and H&M.

Shein, the Chinese fast fashion company popular in the US, recorded $32.2 billion in sales. To give you a sense of scale, Zara’s sales came in at $28 billion, and H&M’s at $22 billion.

Under EU regulations, Shein will face more scrutiny alongside companies like Amazon. Shein is expected to go public in the US this year.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Can Etsy survive in a Temu world?

Handmade marketplace Etsy is fighting for customers as shoppers turn instead of ultra cheap retailers, The Information reports. One problem is that Temu products are often listed for more money on Etsy.

Etsy sellers have long complained about drop shipped items infiltrating the site. It was a key issue in the 2022 seller strike and subsequent organizing efforts.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Would you buy toothpaste on Shein?

The e-comm giant is betting you might. Shein, mostly known for its bargain bin fashion items, is now looking to sell more household items from established brands like Colgate-Palmolive or Hasbro. It’s part of a strategy to challenge Amazon as Shein looks to IPO later this year.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
A black market for dinner reservations.

Ever struggle to get a table at buzzy New York restaurants? Blame the scalpers.

Reservation resellers scour platforms like Resy and OpenTable and resell their spots to the rich and the desperate. It’s apparently a booming industry: a sophomore at Brown says he made $70,000 last year selling reservations.

No Reservations

[The New Yorker]

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Can AI fix online shopping?

Companies like Amazon, eBay, and Shopify promise AI tools will improve our experience of buying things online. The fashion brand Finesse even uses AI to design clothes — but that doesn’t mean products are actually good.

I tried $400 worth of AI clothes, plus product image and text generators to see how they live up to the AI hype.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
This e-commerce darling couldn’t cut it IRL.

Outdoor Voices, a popular athleisure brand once seen as the next Lululemon, is closing all of its stores on Sunday. The direct-to-consumer lifestyle brand was valued at $110 million in 2018, but has been on the decline following internal friction. It’s the end of an era for the e-comm startup once considered a model for founders — the company will go back to selling strictly online.

The birth of a salesman

The Flip shopping app is a TikTok knockoff, filled with wannabe influencers making pennies per video view — myself included.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Who reviews the reviewers?

House Fresh, a blog focused on air quality, is just the kind of source you might want when you’re shopping for an air purifier — but it’s getting harder and harder to find them.

In a post titled, “How Google is killing independent sites like ours,” managing editor Gisele Navarro explains how bigger publishers like BuzzFeed, Better Homes & Gardens, and Rolling Stone outrank the independent site in Google Search:

These Digital Goliaths shouldn’t be able to use product recommendations as their personal piggy bank, simply flying through Google updates off the back of ‘the right signals,’ an old domain, or the echo of a reputable brand that is no longer.

As a team that has dedicated the last few years to testing and reviewing air purifiers, it’s disheartening to see our independent site be outranked by big-name publications that haven’t even bothered to check if a company is bankrupt before telling millions of readers to buy their products.