• The author canceled their Amazon Prime subscription on a whim and realized they didn’t really need it.
  • Leaving Prime meant slower shipping but the author was happy to wait and still found the selection and delivery speed satisfactory.
  • Many people love Prime for its fast shipping and convenience, but some readers expressed ambivalence and considered canceling.

Archive link: https://archive.ph/3M27c

  • @dogslayeggs
    link
    English
    1511 months ago

    I started boycotting Amazon back in 1999 when they pulled the 1-click patent bullshit. I loved them before that.

      • @dogslayeggs
        link
        English
        2811 months ago

        I was an edgy college kid who was raging against software and business process patents. Their 1-click patent started me on a 25 year grudge.

        • @asteriskeverything
          link
          English
          1711 months ago

          Not a lot of people hold onto such a niche part of their righteous rebellious college years for so long. I love that, and your bar was so high too!

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          611 months ago

          A fellow Great Book of Grudges enthusiast! I too started writing mine early. I have not purchased anything Sony since they put rootkits on their CDs in 2005. Nothing. Fuck Sony. And anything Intuit makes for multiple reasons.

          And I am absolutely passing The Great Book on to my kids. They know exactly why we don’t buy certain brands.

        • @moistclump
          link
          English
          311 months ago

          What’s this one click patent ?

          • @dogslayeggs
            link
            English
            411 months ago

            In 1999 Amazon applied for and was granted a US Patent for One Click Purchase. Before then, everyone had a shopping cart that you had to go into to check out and pay. Amazon realized that a huge percentage of people would add stuff to their cart and then leave without buying anything, either because they decided they didn’t REALLY need that thing or because they found it cheaper somewhere else or whatever. They allowed you to save all your credit card info plus shipping preferences, then just hit “1 Click Purchase.” It was convenient for shoppers because they didn’t have to go through the whole checkout steps or add everything then come back later to check out. They could just hit a button and be done. For Amazon, though, it prevented the dreaded “items left in cart.”

            Other sites like Borders and Barnes & Noble, etc also implemented the feature, since it made a lot of money. Amazon filed for a business process patent (I think they also tried it as a software patent??) and forced the entire internet to go back to normal shopping cart purchases. They ended up losing the patent lawsuit in the EU, but that didn’t stop them from enforcing it on US websites. Borders and BN both implemented “2 Click Purchase” to get around it, but the damage was done. In everyone’s minds, Amazon was the place to go for convenience and speed. Amazon made more money, while others started losing money. With that extra money, Amazon was able to move into the “niche” of Walmart, since Walmart hadn’t yet figured out e-commerce. Amazon out-Walmarted Walmart on the web and became the trillion dollar behemoth we have today.

            • @moistclump
              link
              English
              311 months ago

              Wow. Thank you for all of this I had no idea. That helps put a lot of amazons growth and lack of competition into perspective.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        711 months ago

        It’s kinda weird knowing I advertised for them (word of mouth) back around ~2007.

        Cheaper than brick & mortar! INCREDIBLE customer service! No sales tax (until you paid it at tax time of course)!

        Didn’t realize I’d be concentrating power, helping create just about earth’s richest human.