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Lawmakers take aim at ‘Grinches’ using bots during holidays

MIAMI - SEPTEMBER 28: Melissa Brunschwig shops for toys at the Toys"R"Us store on September 28, 2010 in Miami, Florida. Toys"R"Us announced today it will hire about 45,000 employees to help with the holiday season, a larger number than in previous holiday seasons. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (The Hill) — A group of congressional Democrats rolled out legislation Monday to stop “Grinches” from stealing Christmas by using bots to corner the market on popular toys and other products during the holiday season. 

The Stopping Grinch Bots Act would take steps to stop the use of bot technology to buy up major shares of popular toys, which groups or individuals using the bots then resell to consumers for higher prices. Further, the bots are able to get around security measures to buy toys from online markets, making it even harder for parents and children to access these products. 


The bill would build on previous legislation that protected online ticket sales from bots, which was signed into law in 2016. Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) is among the Democratic sponsors pushing for the new measure. 

“This bill seeks to stop Cyber Grinch greed from ruining kids’ holidays,” Blumenthal said in a statement Monday. “New tools are needed to block cyber scammers who snap up supplies of popular toys and resell them at astronomic prices. Price gouging hot toys by Grinch bots should have zero tolerance.”

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) and Rep. Paul Tonko (D-N.Y.) are also sponsoring the legislation. 

The bill is being introduced in the midst of the holiday season, which typically sees the number of online scams increase, particularly since the COVID-19 pandemic has forced shoppers to increasingly move online.  

“The average holiday shopper is unable to compete with the light speed of the all-too-common Grinch bot and are then held at ransom by scalpers and third-party resellers when trying to buy holiday presents,” Schumer said in a separate statement. “After a particularly trying year, no parent or American should have to fork over hundreds — or even thousands — of dollars to buy Christmas and holiday gifts for their children and loved ones.”

Luján stressed that the “rush of the holiday season” gave an opening to malicious actors looking to make money online. 

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