Exactly. Generous return and exchange policies from online retailers are not as uncommon as one might think; that's how these businesses compete with traditional brick-and-mortar stores by offering the customer peace of mind that they will be satisfied when they purchase items without the ability to try them on.
I don't understand the accusations of fraud being levelled at the OP. It's frankly quite rude imo.
Nobody is criticising anyone for returning items for legitimate reasons - you are quite correct that it is standard for online retailers to allow free returns (in fact I think they may even be legally required to do so). That's not the issue though. The suggestion here is that people may have identified a glitch in QFF's system that has enabled them to harvest "free" points by making sham purchases that they never intended to keep. As I pointed out earlier, it may have been possible to harvest very large numbers of points by doing this.
To help you understand where this is coming from, here is a comment from the OP on another thread:
Currently you can get 10 PPD at David Jones via Qantas shopping mall, buy some clothes for $250 and either keep them or decide they don't suite you after the points drop![]()
The OP has told us that he collected points from "3 or 4" purchases that he returned "over the past 6 months", but he still hasn't told us how many points he "earned" from those purchases. And note that the post above was a lot longer than 6 months ago. Hard not to wonder if he regularly decides that items don't suit "after the points drop" (wink wink) ........
Agree 100%.
Another QF IT loophole yet it is the OP fault? In the organisation I run if any activity such as this was occurring the customer is the last person I would shift blame on...I would have my CIO in my office with a 'please explain'.
Let's not forget we are talking about the amazing good value with awesome customer service QF Online Mall![]()
It's absolutely QF's fault that the loophole exists - no question about that. However, that doesn't make it right for someone to go out of their way to systematically exploit the loophole, in order to take something of substantial value that they were not entitled to.