Abu Ahmad ibn Adi al-Jurjani: Most of what he narrates is not preserved, and I have not seen any discussion about him among the earlier scholars
Abu Bakr al-Bazzar: There is leniency in him
Abu Hatim al-Razi: He is upright in himself, but his problem is that he narrates from his brother Abdullah ibn Sa'id, and Abdullah ibn Sa'id is weak in hadith and does not narrate from anyone other than him, so I do not know if the problem is from him or from his brother
Abu Hatim ibn Hibban al-Busti: He narrates from his brother and his father and from his grandfather with a sheet that does not resemble the hadith of Abu Huraira. It seems to the listener that it is fabricated, inverted, or delusional. It is not permissible to use his narration as evidence
Ibn Hajar al-'Asqalani: Lenient in hadith
Al-Dhahabi: Somewhat lenient
Sufyan ibn 'Uyainah: He was a Qadari
Muhammad ibn Isma'il al-Bukhari: His hadith from his brother is not Sahih
Authors of Tahrir Taqrib al-Tahdhib: Weak
Yahya ibn Ma'in: Weak