- Algorithmic Attention Rents: A theory of digital platform market power
- Amazon’s Algorithmic Rents: The economics of information on Amazon
- Behind the Clicks: Can Amazon allocate user attention as it pleases?
Monday, November 27, 2023
Tim O'Reilly on algorithmic tuning for exploitation
Tim O'Reilly, Mariana Mazzucato, and Ilan Strauss have three working papers focusing on Amazon's ability to extract unusual profits from its customers nowadays. The papers are:
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3 comments:
I see a lot of attention on Google's paper about long term effects, but I think it's pretty obvious that even Google doesn't really believe its conclusions. The problem is that in the "really" long term, it's difficult to predict what will drive a company. Platforms will eventually die (or wither away) and user's will move onto something else. So companies that are now behemoths are (probably rightly) focussing on earning enough cash now to either buy/come up with the next big thing.
In amazon's specific case, the other e-commerce platforms are usually worse in most dimensions that users care about.
Hi, Satyajit. I agree that Google has gone back-and-forth over time about how much they care about the long-term.
Search, most importantly, some years puts huge effort into search quality and overall customer experience and some years jacks up the ad load. Right now, under Sundar Pichai, they appear to be focused on hitting quarterly revenue and profit targets whether or not that means jacking up ad load and reducing search quality, so very short-term indeed.
But I think that is just since Pichai has been CEO. It also relies on Google's dominant market share in search, which is dangerous for the company to overuse. I have some hope Google will swing back the other way again as that's been what's happened in the past, creeping up the ad load over years, then deciding to buckle down and invest in a good customer experience again for long-term growth. We'll see.
Oh, and on your comment on other online shopping sites often being worse than Amazon, I'm not sure I agree that's true in my experience. But where I do agree is that it's foolish that Walmart and Target executives copy Amazon (e.g. scammy third-party sellers, poor packing of shipped packages, not offering lower prices) rather than competing on being obviously better than Amazon to consumers. For years now, Walmart has looked like an inferior also-ran to Amazon, which is silly given Walmart's ability to be something else.
We see a similar thing with Bing, where execs seem convinced that they should be an inferior also-ran rather than trying to be better (by, for example, running far fewer ads and offering better privacy) and so stay in distant second place to Google. Or in cloud, where Google Cloud execs refuse to compete on lower prices and so Google Cloud is stuck in distant third place.
Generally, I think you're hinting at that lack of competition is a huge part of the problem. The few competitors that do exist often copy each other, limiting choice further. As O'Reilly's papers and also Cory Doctorow's writing argue, a more competitive market with better alternatives for consumers could be a big part of the solution. Without other good options, consumers can be stuck and enshittification can go on for a long time.
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