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Detecting price and search discrimination on the internet

Published:29 October 2012Publication History

ABSTRACT

Price discrimination, setting the price of a given product for each customer individually according to his valuation for it, can benefit from extensive information collected online on the customers and thus contribute to the profitability of e-commerce services. Another way to discriminate among customers with different willingness to pay is to steer them towards different sets of products when they search within a product category (i.e., search discrimination). Our main contribution in this paper is to empirically demonstrate the existence of signs of both price and search discrimination on the Internet, and to uncover the information vectors used to facilitate them. Supported by our findings, we outline the design of a large-scale, distributed watchdog system that allows users to detect discriminatory practices.

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    • Published in

      cover image ACM Conferences
      HotNets-XI: Proceedings of the 11th ACM Workshop on Hot Topics in Networks
      October 2012
      150 pages
      ISBN:9781450317764
      DOI:10.1145/2390231

      Copyright © 2012 ACM

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      New York, NY, United States

      Publication History

      • Published: 29 October 2012

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