▲ | rkomorn 7 hours ago | |||||||||||||
I don't have access to any data that supports my vibes, but it just feels like any business that sells stuff has very little incentive to actually give you what you're searching for. I can't think of a single online store that's good at search and it seems like it's because the thought is "don't miss anything that might come close to the search terms". Whether it's Amazon, IKEA, the supermarkets where I live, etc, any search I make comes back with what looks like spray and pray SEO. Maybe it's actually a hard problem to solve, or maybe the goal is "sell anything!" (including better placement the seller pays for) rather than "give the user what they want". | ||||||||||||||
▲ | whilenot-dev 7 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
Probably the virtual variant of the Gruen effect in action: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gruen_transfer Fortunately we still have Geizhals in AT[0]/DE[1]/PL[2]/UK[3] to work around that. [0]: https://geizhals.at/ [1]: https://geizhals.de/ | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | distances 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||
Ikea is different though: they only sell their own products so there's so earning incentives from paid product placement. Of course they want to improve their own sales but I feel that's a very different, less nefarious goal. | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | 0xEF 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
It's the "sell anything" goal, which is a direct result of the larger "growth at all costs" goal, the cancer that is enshittifying everything. |