Because a single label has little value, but they are bought in drums holding 1000s of them.
And this means that many enterprises decide to lower the quality of the labels and thus cut some costs.
After all, who will complain? Some rando on the Internet? đ
With some exceptions, it is at most a minor annoyance, the vast majority of poeple are not so hung up on it that they're going to bother raising a complaint.
Besides, there is an argument to be made that the easier it is to remove an external label without leaving residue, the more likely it will fall off during shipping or stocking, or removed outright by someone before the customer gets it. These kinds of labels stay put and that's what the company wants until it's paid for.
Hell, the label OP posted has "Important" right there. The manufacter wants to ensure that label stays right where it is until its in the customers hands so they can convey whatever they need to convey. These types of labels absolutely accomplish that.
The label says "importado", which means "imported". It really had no important information on it.
Of course, compared to other things this is a minor nuisance at most, but I still get mad every time. They even added a second label saying that the bowl is not dishwasher safe. And my wife bought a whole set, 20 pieces, 40 labels.
Nah, it says "IMPORTADO", not Important.
And if both the manufacturer of the product and its seller/re-seller accepted it, it means they think it "good enough".
Money beats logic, quality, professionalism. I work in corpo, I can attest it to be truth.
Thatâs generally for UPCâs labels and is part of the reason but... There are thousand's of different adhesives that react differently to the material you are placing them on. Most companies donât do a ton of due diligence on what adhesives are removed the best because itâs not typically a big concern
labels normally are harder to remove than not, because itâs preferred for the company. If your label contains legal information about risk of use or any other important things of note, you need to be 100% certain that the label remains on your product throughout the entire shipment process. Couple that with the myriad of different surfaces you may apply it to, itâs better to be safe than sorry. Itâs also cheaper to purchase material in larger quantities, so often companies will leverage the same label material and size to reduce costs.
I often get flower bouquets that have this garbage on them. Why fucking put the price right on something intended to be a gift when you use shitty paper stickers like this? Makes zero sense.
stamp collectors used carbon tetrachloride vapours to remove glue from stamps. unfortunately it's also pretty good at removing liver, and it's pretty much impossible to get even for some labs anyway. modern alternative is (liquid) hexane or petroleum ether (room temperature)
put this spawn of satan under a tissue soaked in light petroleum spirit (light hydrotreated naphta/petroleum ether also works). it's unlikely that this solvent will damage about anything other than glue, which it dissolves pretty well, even lettering should be left unscratched
If the surface is flat enough, start with a scraper. One of those single edged replaceable blade deals. That'll quickly take off 90%, if not all of it. If the blade gets sticky and you want to made another pass, wipe it off with some oil (basically any, even olive oil). Then go for the other suggestions, like rubbing the sticker with oil and alcohol.
This works much quicker than just oil and alcohol, BUT the surface has to be flat. If it isn't flat, it has to be non-razor-blade-damage-vulnerable material.
Because the thing holding it together is plastic and using plastic frivolously is frowned upon. The label tears so the turtles live. Convenience costs environment, deal with it.