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The Almighty Buck Businesses United States

Amazon Launches Program To Pay Consumers For Their Data On Non-Amazon Purchases (techcrunch.com) 51

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: Amazon has launched a new program that directly pays consumers for information about what they're purchasing outside of Amazon.com and for responding to short surveys. The program, Amazon Shopper Panel, asks users to send in 10 receipts per month for any purchases made at non-Amazon retailers, including grocery stores, department stores, drug stores and entertainment outlets (if open), like movie theaters, theme parks and restaurants. Amazon's own stores, like Whole Foods, Amazon Go, Amazon Four Star and Amazon Books do not qualify.

Program participants will take advantage of the newly launched Amazon Shopper Panel mobile app on iOS and Android to take pictures of paper receipts that qualify or they can opt to forward emailed receipts to receipts@panel.amazon.com to earn a $10 reward that can then be applied to their Amazon Balance or used as a charitable donation. Amazon says users can then earn additional rewards each month for every survey they complete. The optional surveys will ask about brands and products that may interest the participant and how likely they are to purchase a product. Other surveys may ask what the shopper thinks of an ad. These rewards may vary, depending on the survey.
The program is currently opt-in and invite-only for U.S. consumers only.

The report also notes that Amazon "will delete any sensitive information from the receipts users upload, like prescription information." Importantly, Amazon "doesn't delete users' personal information, instead storing it in accordance with its existing Privacy Policy. It will allow users to delete their previously uploaded receipts, if they choose."
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Amazon Launches Program To Pay Consumers For Their Data On Non-Amazon Purchases

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  • by nevermindme ( 912672 ) on Wednesday October 21, 2020 @09:22AM (#60631140)
    The population they have fought tooth and nail for have been bought off for the retail list price of prime membership plus labor. People wonder why I am anti liberal causes with good intentions, it is not that the cause is always a losers on a conservative scale, it that it in general the people being fought for just wander like helpless sheep. Next or it already happening, Amazon will pay the interest on amazon branded CCs for your shopping details and video reviews by your nine year old.
    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      The Subject seemed promising, and it wasn't AC, so I wanted to congratulate you for an FP well played, but then I tried to figure it out. What is your point supposed to be?

      Now I'm wondering if your FP helps explain so little activity on a potentially interesting topic. On the one hand, getting paid for my personal information (to be held in safe custody until such time as I want it back) is actually a business model I started advocating many years ago. On the other hand, Amazon is doing this for ulterior re

  • OK but (Score:5, Funny)

    by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Wednesday October 21, 2020 @09:42AM (#60631208) Homepage Journal

    Do they accept panoramas, or videos? Otherwise I can't send them my CVS receipt.

  • So long as it's opt-in and they're up front with what data they're keeping.

    If you use their cloud drive service to store photos or emails you're ALREADY storing personal info that they're not going to delete anyway.

    Not that I'd sign up for it (although I do have a gas card for my regular gas station where they pay me "points" and give me discounts for using my card when making purchases which, I'm sure, gets linked to my Credit Card # and then my name and address and then I'm naked on the internet...)

  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Wednesday October 21, 2020 @10:09AM (#60631322)

    Here is the problem. We have the cost of products reduced, if we agree to give up some personal information, some companies will give us money if they are allowed to look at our information.
    While we know that they will be looking at the information, they are not saying how much and what in particular they are looking at. How am I suppose to figure out if I am getting a good deal, if I don't know how much I am really paying for.

    Is Amazon just seeing what I buy? Or are they seeing how much attention I put on the cost of a product. Is the fact that I buy Brand Named Frozen Vegetables over the Store Brand a factor. If I am going to get paid for my data. I really should know what data they are using so I know if I am being properly compensated for it or not.

    • Amazon doesn't know from your receipts why you bought what you bought, but they will be able to get some idea from the survey data. But you'll know what survey questions they're asking you, because you'll be answering them. (Or, you know, not.)

      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        Still trying to figure out the joke in your previous post (moderated funny), but on this one I feel like you're kind of missing the point. They don't care about "why" or "how you think" as long as they can control or at least influence "when" and "what" you buy. In a sense these corporate cancers are tying to know us better than we know ourselves, and (to me) the point of this story is that Bezos is "confessing" how valuable that data is when he offers to pay for more of it.

        I do not have any details about t

        • by shanen ( 462549 )

          I gotta work harder to stop typos. *sigh*

          s/tying/trying/

        • They don't care about "why" or "how you think" as long as they can control or at least influence "when" and "what" you buy.

          They can't, except through pricing, because I am [relatively] canny. I don't just buy shit because it's "Amazon's choice". Their own reviews usually tell you why you shouldn't! Doing literally the least bit of homework (read the Amazon reviews, then if they don't give enough data, go read some other reviews, which I do regularly) will help you make intelligent purchasing decisions.

          Amazon is most likely primarily figuring out what to carry so that they can beat the competition on price. And their surveys wil

          • by shanen ( 462549 )

            Well, I'd refer you to Harari for the topic of Amazon knowing you better than you know yourself, but on Personality Insights it sounds like you used relatively unrevealing text, something that you wrote with a specific purpose and audience in mind. I think you'll get more interesting results if you use more personal stuff. Did you look at the graphic representations? They are modified pie charts, but they give additional insight into how the vector space is structured. And don't forget that this is only a s

            • I'd refer you to Harari for the topic of Amazon knowing you better than you know yourself, but on Personality Insights it sounds like you used relatively unrevealing text, something that you wrote with a specific purpose and audience in mind.

              That may be. I was looking for a large enough sample to be useful. I do however tend to use a similar voice in most contexts. The only big difference is when I'm writing professionally, which I wasn't doing there; it was just something I wrote to condense my thoughts, and help people who are looking for information not designed to sell anything. I posted it to my blog, which has no ads.

              • by shanen ( 462549 )

                Sounds like contemplative text, which definitely gives me a different tone. Also sounds unlikely that it was long enough to give strong results. I remember one time I pasted in about 30,000 words from various email messages...

    • by Alumoi ( 1321661 )

      If they're giving you $10 be assured they get at least $100 out of you.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      I don't see a problem. I sign up. I collect 10 receipts from the trash bins right outside the stores (or even off the ground sometimes). I can wear gloves while doing this. I scan those receipts and I profit. I'd only use ones where the purchase was in cash and no loyalty program was used of course. Can't let Amazon catch on.
  • If its Amazon, it not fair and equitable. I consider my data to be priceless. no one has enough money to by this from me. Not even Bezos
    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      Are you telling us that you don't know how data mining works? Your individual data is close to worthless, unless you're a big shot of some kind. It's only in aggregate that analysis of it is worthwhile. If you use a credit card you've already sold your data in exchange for nothing more than the convenience.

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      Basically concurrence and I wish I had a favorable mod point for you, though it appears you don't want anyone to read your comment. However I have a few follow up questions.

      (1) What if you could tell Amazon to delete your data at any time?

      (2) Would you trust Amazon to delete it?

      (3) And what about the backups?

      Of course I think it's moot. If it is valuable data, then the corporate cancer Amazon has already sold copies. PROFIT!

  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Wednesday October 21, 2020 @10:44AM (#60631474)

    If I refuse to get paid to give you my data, will you take it anyway - like you're doing now?

    Yours truly,
    Someone who values his privacy.

    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      Of course they will, it will just cost them a minuscule amount more.

      As Scott McNealy said in 1998, "You have no privacy. Get over it." The man may be an ass, but in the subsequent 22 years I've never seen any indication to the contrary.

      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        No, I disagree. There are certain kinds of data that they can't get without your cooperation. However, (per my other comments in this discussion) you (and Scott McNealy) are correct about the larger framing.

  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Wednesday October 21, 2020 @10:49AM (#60631512)

    Do some dumpster diving outside big-box retail stores, get other people's receipts, scan them, send that bullshit to Amazon, get paid to mess up their database.

    What's not to love eh?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      That is still going to give the Bezos Mafia data on what people are buying and where. That will allow them to target other companies directly and drive them to the wall.

      Don't give old baldy basically free marketing data.
      There is competition and there is Amazon. Totally different. Amazon is a behmoth hell bent on ruling the retail world, all over the world (apart from where banned)

      • Fair enough. Then make a small script to generates fake scan of fake receipts. Should be simple enough.

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        And Walmart, Target and Kroger aren't?

        To be truthful, of the four I personally think Amazon is the least-objectionable (and I've worked at Target).

    • Lol, or like people were doing with grocery store cards and just swapping them back and forth. "The Receipt Exchange" And pre-redact it, leaving only item and amount.
  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Wednesday October 21, 2020 @01:02PM (#60632076) Journal
    "We can't steal the data for free like we usually do because Google has that game all tied up already, so we'll have to (*weary sigh*) PAY people cash to lure the data away from Google and into our servers instead. Thankfully it'll be just a pittance compared to how much we'll make off the data but the general public sheep won't feel that way, they'll think they're 'getting justice' or somesuch nonsense."

The moon is made of green cheese. -- John Heywood

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