this post was submitted on 21 Oct 2025
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IMO there are sufficient search engines to find products in online shops, to check availability, compare prices etc.
I see the main selling point of Amazon in the huge assortment (you can get everything in one place without shipping fees), the user ratings (although the quality massively declined during the last years) and the fast delivery. I'm boycotting them for around one year now and everytime I need to order a strange combination of things I'm getting reminded how convenient it used to be. I don't intend to order there again, but I definitely need much longer to buy stuff now.
I think the biggest pull (for me at least) is a uniform shopping experience. I go directly to the manufacturer when possible and bypass Amazon but I do notice the rigmarole of how products are laid out differently on each site, some with or without a search feature, most without reviews (ratings are crap but sometimes reviewers can clear up ambiguity), each having their own checkout system (PayPal makes things a bit easier), and each has it's own return policy which is rarely as good as Amazon.
I think setting up a standard API for finding products, getting their specs, reading their policies at a high level, and ordering with a single login would go a long way towards taking down Amazon. I see the solution more as a federated one where vendors either host their own instance or pay some percentage of sales or flat rate to list products on someone else's instance.
That's a clever suggestion. That would need multiple people and companies to partner up but very viable. Can also make a foundation to help setup that standard too