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Federal Court OKs Amazon's System of Suggesting Alternative Products

concealment writes "Many of us have had the experience of going to Amazon to buy one thing but checking out with a huge shopping cart of items that we didn't initially seek—or even know were available. Amazon's merchandising often benefits Amazon's customers, but trademark owners who lose sales to their competition due to it aren't as thrilled. Fortunately for Amazon, a California federal court recently upheld Amazon's merchandising practices in its internal search results."

3 of 102 comments (clear)

  1. Truly sad by Ravensfire · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Go to a store and you'll generally see competing products next to each other and that's okay. But try to do something similar on-line? Horror! Unfair! Must file lawsuit! It's become our culture but the practice of suing for anything and everything has become utterly ridiculous in the last decade or so.

    --
    "But we decide which is right, and which is an illusion"
    1. Re:Truly sad by Osiris+Ani · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Go to a store and you'll generally see competing products next to each other and that's okay. But try to do something similar on-line?

      ...writes the person who clearly didn't read the article. I say that because if you did, you'd know that the products in question quite specifically aren't actually available on Amazon.com.

  2. Re:cry some more by MDMurphy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It doesn't have to be a keyword. Amazon has a feature "other people who searched for that bought this". So people could initially have searched for the exclusive watch, not found it and then looked at others. They might even have bought one. Amazon wouldn't have had to do anything specific regarding the "other watch" besides see what people who came looking for it looked at after when they didn't find it.