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Bing Cashback Can Cost You Money

paltemalte writes "Microsoft and various retailers have teamed up to bring you cashback on purchases made via Bing's price comparison feature. There is a little snag, though — it seems that when you have a Bing cookie living in your browser, some retailers will quote you a higher price than if you come with no Bing cookie in your system."

5 of 333 comments (clear)

  1. Instead of complaining, game the system. by ZackSchil · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Find out what sites go higher and what sites go lower in quoted prices. Fake a cookie to maximize savings or delete it altogether if it gets you a uniformly higher price.

    That's the behavior I'd expect from /. . None of this Newsweek / Dateline NBC alarmist "They're using COMPUTER MACHINES to scam us!!!" Get on it, people.

  2. Come on, it's obviously the store that's shady by Edgewize · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This has nothing to do with Microsoft. From the article: Butterfly Photo set a three month cookie on my computer to indicate that I came from Bing.

    So, a disreputable web site is setting a cookie when you click on a sales link. How is this Microsoft's fault again? What does this have to do with Bing?

    A/V and photography stores are notorious for ripping off customers, both in-store and on-line. Surprise surprise, you can find these disreputable sites using search engines. Trying to blame this on Bing is like trying to blame your phone book for recommending a sketchy car mechanic.

  3. Re:The first thing that came to mind... by jesseck · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I worked for a national healthcare system which offered a Dell employee purchase program. My wife wanted a pink laptop, and I quickly found out I could get a better deal on a regular "sale" from Dell than the "12% employee purchase program discount" could ever give me. They're scams, which attempt to con people into thinking they are getting a deal.

  4. Re:"Is this legal" is the wrong question by mysidia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, what's illegal is deceptive business practices.

    They claim to be offering a cash back if you utilize Bing, which implies a discount, where in fact, they are charging a higher price upfront to Bing users and creating a deceptive impression that the cash back is providing a discount of their normal price.

  5. Re:It is? by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    After the search is where it gets better. The results pages on Bing are way better, and have even caused a stir at Google.

    In what way? During the brief period I tried Bing, I was thoroughly unimpressed.

    Giving me relevant results is the ONLY thing I care about with a search engine. Bing didn't do as well as Google - end of story. If it had done as well as Google, I still wouldn't have cared - it'd have to provide better results for me to even care.

    --
    #DeleteChrome