Is it possible to one day replace the privacy nightmare of Amazon with a decentralized merchant network? All I really use Amazon for these day is aggregate customer reviews by query, then buy the items as direct as possible. Why can’t respectable tools to this instead? I understand the cost, but could the tech be adopted?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    71 year ago

    There are malls, markets, things like that. These are just the front end for the customers to buy things, the retailer.

    As you said there are centralisation behind. Either through the same company managing all those different malls, or through Wholesalers working in the background selling to a lot of retailers.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      61 year ago

      Totally agree, what we really need is a “Uber Eats/Deliveroo for everything”, leveraging local businesses. And if we can get a decentralized reputation system, then such platform can be decentralized as well.

      • @[email protected]OP
        link
        fedilink
        English
        11 year ago

        Right! I was thinking that with an infinitely scaling model without a single point of failure

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        11 year ago

        I like this idea so much. The problem is quality control.

        Uber Eats here in UK really struggles to delivery an accurate order. And where there is a problem the driver blames the restaurant, the restaurant blames the driver, and Uber or the restaurant (it’s frequently not clear where to begin) may or may not issue a refund and perhaps an apology, but that doesn’t solve the problem which is you don’t have the food you were promised and that you paid for. No one takes responsibility for that.

        Who in a decentralised system can or should take responsibility?

        Amazon, for all their many faults, claim to be trying to make the most customer-centric company on earth. A lot of their early success came from a stellar returns policy, shouldering responsibility for products they dispatched, as well as excellent prices. Not so much now, but certainly during their incredible retail growth period.

        How do you code for that in a federated system? And, if you can, how do you compete in a wider marketplace with an Amazon monolith?

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          3
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Who in a decentralised system can or should take responsibility?

          The customers. :) Ear me out:

          The main reason why there is so much problems with deliveries (way more with UPS, DHL and the likes than Uber Eats deliverers, in my own experience) is because we’re not their customers, in their heads. They’re paid by the merchants (UPS/DHL/etc are paid by your shop keeper), or they’re paid by the platform (rider is paid Uber Eats/Deliveroo/etc), but the end customer is just part of the constraints, for them, especially since the customer doesn’t even choose who will deliver their package (you don’t like UPS? Too bad!). Give the customer that choice, and make them pay directly for the delivery to the deliverer, and I guarantee all those problems will go away. This is why I said we need a decentralized reputation system : so that the customer can see the reputation of local delivery service before selecting them.

          When the problem is with the shop, well, this is already sort of dealt with. We already have reviews systems and we already select our shops, so it does happen that shops behave poorly, but not for long. Although, users have to be educated about verifying reviews, and developers have to implement countermeasures and stay on top of the review cheating game.

          And to avoid problems with the platform, we have the interoperability of standards like ActivityPub : there is one global network (like the fediverse, or the web), and multiple programs are implemented to use it. They have a incentive to work well because there is competition, something that centralized platforms eliminate altogether.