Amazon’s new Wishlist policy: “Surprise gift” or “surprise doxxing”?

If you’re a content creator who shares an Amazon Wishlist publicly, heads up: Amazon says that starting March 25, 2026, they’re removing the option to restrict list purchases to Amazon-only sellers. That means a gift can be fulfilled by a third-party seller and your delivery address is shared for fulfillment (and Amazon notes it may become visible during delivery/tracking). 😬

This might be "fine" for private lists shared with friends… but for creators? It increases the risk of harassment, stalking, and doxxing.

Why creators are worried

  • More people/systems see your shipping details (third-party sellers + delivery partners).
  • Public audiences aren’t always friendly — one bad actor is enough.
  • "Just use a PO Box" adds cost, friction, and still ties you to a physical location.

Privacy-first gifting: the Spicyfanz option 🔥

Spicyfanz was built with creator safety in mind. Instead of exposing your personal address, Spicyfanz lets fans support you through a wishlist that pulls items from the Spicerack Marketplace — including toys, lingerie, and wellness products — while keeping your personal delivery details protected.

Quick comparison

Feature Amazon Wishlist Spicyfanz + Spicerack
Address shared with third-party sellers Yes (per policy update) No (privacy-first flow)
Built for creators Not really Yes
Adult-friendly wishlist items Limited Native to the marketplace

Want safer gifting?

Creators shouldn’t have to trade safety for support. If your audience is public, a creator-first wishlist can be the difference between "cute unboxing video" and "why does a stranger know where I live?"

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