Amazon Offers $10 To Prime Day Shoppers Who Hand Over Their Data (reuters.com) 91
Amazon.com has a promotion for U.S. shoppers on Prime Day, the 48-hour marketing blitz that started Monday: Earn $10 of credit if you let Amazon track the websites you visit. From a report: The deal is for new installations of the Amazon Assistant, a comparison-shopping tool that customers can add to their web browsers. It fetches Amazon's price for products that users see on Walmart.com, Target.com and elsewhere. In order to work, the assistant needs access to users' web activity, including the links and some page content they view. The catch, as Amazon explains in the fine print, is the company can use this data to improve its general marketing, products and services, unrelated to the shopping assistant. The terms underscore the power consumers routinely give to Amazon and other big technology companies when using their free services. In this case, Amazon gains potential insight into how it should tailor marketing and how it could stamp out the retail competition.
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I suppose you could say "At least they're being upfront, and allowing you to sell them your data". It's g not o like o other g companies l that e just take it without you ever knowing or being compensated.
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I was going to say that seems a little cheap...$10 a month, never expires, then maybe.
Re: Attention Jeff Bezos (Score:1)
What exactly do you propose they are doing with it then? Do you realize "improve their services" means "manipulate you into buying everything from them"? They will probably let third parties in on the action too - unless you think they are more benevolent than Facebook. (Ha!)
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Surprised they don't already have this information.
Thought experiment, would an economic collapse like the Great Depression be worth it if the surveillance economy crumbled, and never returned?
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Thanks (Score:5, Funny)
Thanks for the tip. I just signed up. I got the $10 and already spent it on Amazon (it is Prime Day!). I just bought a Amazon Ring Doorbell and a Amazon FireTV!
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No problem! Did I mention if you order a Ring Video Doorbell via Alexa you can get it for $99 instead of $199? Offer expires today.
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I ordered it via an Echo Dot. If you order a Ring Video Doorbell 2 via Alexa on the Dot you can get it for $99 instead of the regular $199.
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Same reason people gladly get anal probed by the TSA. It is all in the guise of security theater to make people feel "safer" but in fact really does nothing.
Wait, what?! I only got my nuts squeezed. I'm gonna go through the line again.
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Even if they do ask nicely, the correct answer is still fuck you.
Wow, seriously (Score:2)
What could possibly go wrong?
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Actually, some of us have been asking for companies to stop collecting our data without our permission - period.
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One-time? (Score:1)
If it was $10 per month, I think a lot more people would consider it. But a one-time payout for all of my history from then forever? Nah, my history is worth more than that.
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Nothing. You can literally install it, spend the $10, and then remove it. That's why this article is so overblown.
cheap (Score:2)
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Create two accounts and use it in two different browsers. $10+$10=$20!
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You will be as rich as Jeff Bezos' ex-wife!
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Or make infinite numbers to be super rich! :P
$20 is still weak! (Score:2)
$10 and $20 are not worth it at all. $10,000,000,000 [pinky finger to my mouth], I might accept that offer then. :P
It'll cost more in the long run (Score:2)
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The opposite. If you start looking at Walmart.com they will drop their prices to undercut them. Win-win for you!
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And they already have an app to scan barcodes in stores so they can display their offering: https://www.groovypost.com/howto/amazon-barcode-scanner-purchase-products-from-your-phone/ [groovypost.com].
There's something very discomfiting about this new "offer". I can think of an amount I'd go for but it's not $10. Maybe $10,000,000. Definitely $50,000,000.
Amazon's Stores arn't profitable (Score:2)
As hard as it might be to believe, Amazon doesn't actually profit off it's market services. Amazon Web Services is apparently where all their profit is and they run Amazon marketplace at a loss. The reality is that when it comes to selling things online, there's not that much profit to be had so it shouldn't be surprising that Amazon's continually trying different ways to try to net a profit but in the meantime just end up stomping their competitors out of business. It's a business model similar to Micro
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I'm sur
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Their online store division is paying their AWS division for data processing. So all the profits appear on AWS. Great way to inflate your position with AWS. That doesn't mean none of the money is coming from physical goods sales.
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Add a zero and make it monthly. (Score:2)
Add this to a browser... (Score:2)
Install & Uninstall (Score:2)
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Or, you know, have some personally integrity and don't install it in the first place instead of basically saying that you *WILL* share your data, and then turning around and not following through just because there happens to be no way that it can come back to bite you.
It's one thing if you install something by accident and then uninstall it because you realize you don't want it there, or hell... even uninstalling after reconsidering the implications
It's quite another to enter an arrangement of any kin
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No, they are paying $10 because they want your data, and they are taking installing the software as sufficient verification that you intend to do so, and releasing the $10 to you. If you never actually had that intent, but simply go through the motions to get them to release the $10, then you are deliberately trying to deceive them about what your intentions actually are.
This is indicative of a lack of personal integrity.
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Such a modest proposal....
How is the "opt-out" handled? (Score:2)
If I had to guess (Score:2)
I don't mind them knowing what I'm buying (Score:2)
I just don't think it's worth $10 to have their probably crappy software on my system.