- Joined
- Oct 12, 2025
- Messages
- 9
100% of the seams should have tape. Not a piece in the middle!! It gets stepped on and arrives open,
That it may be... But so is a package that is blown out in spots that it is not taped. They must be busy dealing with ebay sellers then, because you learn real fast to tape every seam. Not only can you spot and prevent tampering, your product actually stays in the box. I do not think a judge will issue a warrant to cut open a package because it is taped well.100% taped seams is a r3d fl@g among many for the p0astal c0ps
Maybe, rules are changing. I always used the tyvek bags, addressed inside any box or envelope. Tyvek is pretty tough. Machinery is a big culprit.A judge will issue a war rant on a hunch, because just about any pkg will tick a couple of the czechboxes and an affadavit plus an 'enc0uraged' dog sniff will get it done. But taped heavily on all sides makes it imo more likely pkg will be noticed and for the p0@stal een spec tor to pick up on it. A dubble lay er with the inner taped at all the seams and the outer half-@ssed would be better.
They must be busy dealing with ebay sellers then, because you learn real fast to tape every seam.
*(This is not ebay)
I do not think a judge will issue a warrant to cut open a package because it is taped well.
Are you saying New regulations don't allow for recipients to pay for balance dueThey are scrutinizing more than ever, a1 is anyway. If it looks "suspicious", they will pull it and too much tape has been on that list for a decade plus.
Also, if they flag a package for c¤unt3rfeit postage or insufficient postage, as opposed to before, they will hold it. You will get an alert on ID. If it goes unfixed on the senders end (you aren't allowed to pay it) then its forfeited.
You dont pull war ants on for your own property. This went into effect Sept 15th this year.
Scrutinizing for fr4ud and trying to get the revenue as opposed to an ebay label or other service.