What changed is that I told them that I was turning the matter over to my attorney. They know that they're crooks, so, suddenly, I was entitled to the monies which they had previously told me on four separate occasions that they weren't going to pay me.
I'll press them for the monies that they own me for this month sometime around the middle of next month. Normally, they send me out remittance forms on the 20th of the month for what they're going to pay me for my previous month's sales, and then the monies are directly deposited into my bank account on the 29th (the 29th falls on a Sunday this month, so I just got some monies deposited into my account today).
When I know that I'm getting my monies next month that I'm owed for this month's sales (up until they terminated my account on the 10th), then I have one more legal threat for them which may or may not get my account reinstated.
Amazon has very expensive stock prices per share. And it's had it's share of problems lately with lawsuits against them for wages owed. Another one surrounding suppliers is not something that they really want.
They have had a lot of rumors and accusations about those who self publish their books being robbed and plagerism and even works outright stolen and the original author accused of plagerism.
It's kinda a mess when everything is so automated and huge at the same time.
With today's automated electronic banking and search AIs... you would think that this would be a thing of the past.
It really is not that difficult to determine who sold what, when, and where. Plagerism should be easily determined... just like identity. Just like stolen porch packages vs employees not truly delivering packages was easily remedied.
ALL retail outlets for vendors are a source for a long history of bad relationships. Grocery stores are notorious for treating vendors as sub-human. Same thing with restaurants and their suppliers.
It all comes with the territory. Since Amazon treats it's own employees so poorly a vendor is always treated with less respect than a regular employee.
If you ever find a place that doesn't follow this rule I really want to know about it.
The customer is king, the employees are favored slaves, and suppliers/vendors are sub-human.
The only time I have ever gotten decent treatment as a vendor from a retailer is when they were heavily in debt to me...and knew it...and were begging for products.