Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Game Theory considerations #15

Open
jonas4climate opened this issue Mar 26, 2020 · 4 comments
Open

Game Theory considerations #15

jonas4climate opened this issue Mar 26, 2020 · 4 comments

Comments

@jonas4climate
Copy link

This was just a thought, not sure if it is too relevant on the current scale, but wanted to get it out there.

If this extension were to become popular and be used by a large number of amazon users, it would be possible that everyone choosing the same recommended seller will overload the seller's logistics capacity to deliver, stock being available etc. and would therefore lead to a worse overall experience.

I assume that this would balance out if reviews come in significantly quick because the extension would then recommend a different seller but this might be something worth to consider? Especially if multiple sellers are almost identically recommendable.

@musicin3d
Copy link
Collaborator

musicin3d commented Mar 26, 2020

Good question. I believe amazon tracks quantity in stock, so it ought to prevent sales when a seller runs out.

@jonas4climate
Copy link
Author

jonas4climate commented Mar 26, 2020 via email

@musicin3d
Copy link
Collaborator

musicin3d commented Mar 27, 2020

I think you're right about it balancing out though. This is armchair conjecture, but IMO if there is such demand and another seller can handle the volume better, then they deserve to come out on top. Counterpoint to that could be, "What if none of the sellers can handle it?" I think the dropping ratings across all listings would expose an opportunity for another seller who can handle the volume.

I have only a cursory knowledge of game theory. Which principle applies to this situation?

@chrismbryant
Copy link
Owner

Interesting point. I'm not sure we're really recommending one seller over another here, we're just providing some perspective on one aspect of the reliability of Amazon's star rating. I don't think that the results from our extension would dictate a person's purchase behavior too deterministically, so I'm not really worried about dramatically changing the landscape of the Amazon marketplace.

Anyway, I would be surprised if Amazon didn't already take this into consideration internally when designing their recommendation engine to choose what results to show to what users and in what order to display those results. I wonder if the products marked "Amazon's Choice" are already affected by the dynamics you brought up, @j0ner0n...

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

3 participants