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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday November 29 2018, @04:23PM   Printer-friendly
from the another-brick-in-the-wall dept.

Submitted via IRC for SoyCow1984

Parents putting together baby registries on Amazon have begun to notice a pesky problem, one that has resulted in parents receiving items they neither listed nor wanted. The online retailer has been placing sponsored products in baby registries, the Wall Street Journal reports, but because the ads look so similar to other registry items, people are purchasing them, unaware that the items weren't added to the registry by parents. Like added items, the sponsored products include an image, rating, price and a "0 of 1 Purchased" tag. The only thing that distinguishes them is a small, gray "Sponsored" label situated just above the item name.

[...] One new dad told the Wall Street Journal that he only realized Amazon had placed sponsored products in his baby registry when the Aveeno bath-time set arrived at his home. He said the ads were "blatantly trying to trick you." "Worst part is a friend spent money on something we didn't want. And Amazon profited," he added. While users can remove these ads from their registries, Amazon reportedly told advertisers that around 60 percent were left in place.

Source: https://www.engadget.com/2018/11/28/amazon-inserting-sponsored-products-baby-registries/


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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Thursday November 29 2018, @08:08PM (1 child)

    by VLM (445) on Thursday November 29 2018, @08:08PM (#767893)

    From what I understand that product is "outfit compare" and it doesn't sell stuff. Merely an A/B testing "hot or not" which supposedly is not public. Honestly I think its more a demo for Mechanical Turk than a real feature.

    Its funny that every mass media story including actual footage of the product always involves messy bedrooms in the background, Jordan Peterson would not be amused. Because of my military background I never lived like a filthy hoarder or maybe living in filth was less acceptable in my generation, now tell those kids to get off my lawn and put their dirty underwear in the laundry hamper like a civilized beast. Just pointing out a little research into the product is both informative (as per above) and also sometimes very funny.

    I'm not disagreeing with you WRT psychopath etc, although I am disagreeing in some minor details.

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  • (Score: 2) by Knowledge Troll on Friday November 30 2018, @12:21AM

    by Knowledge Troll (5948) on Friday November 30 2018, @12:21AM (#768051) Homepage Journal

    Thanks for the comment - those little details matter! Though it's pretty obvious that someone at Amazon is paying a firm to analyze the market to figure out when it'll be socially acceptable enough they can flip that "sells stuff" bit for the product.