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A Blooper from “The World’s Best Retailer”

The website for the Girls Scouts of the USA clearly states:

Q: Can I buy Girl Scout Cookies online?

A: Girl Scouts of the USA does not currently allow online sales, but its cookie site GirlScoutCookies.org can help you locate girls selling in your community. Simply visit www.GirlScoutCookies.org

So perhaps one can forgive Amazon.com, “the world’s best retailer“, for not having any in stock. Still, it’s hard to forgive the results they return when you search for girl scout cookies on their site. It’s safe for work, but not for the faint of heart. Via window office.

I hope that Amazon resolves this issue quickly (Note: they already have, though not before making headlines all over the web and blogosphere), and perhaps offers an explanation of this unsual relevance ranking result. In any case, I have saved a screen shot for posterity here.

By Daniel Tunkelang

High-Class Consultant.

12 replies on “A Blooper from “The World’s Best Retailer””

To err is human. But to return results like these requires an opaque relevance ranking algorithm. Seriously, they would look a lot better if they could explain what happened. Given the amount of discussion on the web, I imagine they’ll do so. I certainly hope so: I’d love to understand how things could go so wrong. It’s a bit early for an April Fool’s joke, and this is far too over the top to have been sanctioned by management.

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For sure, algorithms should work to avoid this kind of really unfortunate–if hilarious–blunder. And, I agree, it would help if Amazon were more transparent about it.

I can’t help but suspect, however, that part of what shocks us as humans is based on our mistakenly anthropomorphizing code. I’m certainly no expert in AI, but my sense is that machines cannot themselves make moral decisions. “Magical theories of reference” don’t work.

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Actually, machines are perfectly able to follow instructions, and most sites that cater to heterogeneous audiences (at least in the prudish United Sates) go to great lengths to avoid presenting “adult” content to users who don’t clearly want to find it. Google turns on moderate safe search by default; other sites require you to click through an age verification page; etc.

Of course, Amazon’s content here isn’t quite in that category. Still, it’s not that hard to manually label the areas of the sites that might cause offense and make those products harder to find by accident. We actually had to do something like that in our first ecommerce deployment at Endeca, for a site that sold a wide variety of movies.

Still, no algorithmic or heuristc approach is perfect, which is why transparency is the best policy.

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Maybe it was based on your purchasing history David. The speculums and wolf urine are gone, but under the first girl scout costume listed, I do see them under “Customers Who Viewed This Item Also Viewed”. They might have left open a positive feedback mechanism, and its amplifying random associations, although the appearance in that section may have been effect rather than cause. If they’re smart, they would not include those who viewed the item by using the “Also Viewed…” links in the stats to generate the “Also Viewed…” links, or use those to fill out sparse search results. It seems clear that the speculums and wolf urine were included not because of a lexical match to the name or description, but because of an association with something that did match, and the “Also Viewed” seems like a good candidate. It may also have been some common tags that were applied. The GS outfit was tagged with “Morgan Freeman”, which could explain why some saw products related to him. The Wolf Urine is also tagged with “valentines day gift”, and the GS outfit may have been so tagged at some point. Pity I couldn’t eyeball it before it was fixed. I wonder if we can get this to happen to an obscure search phrase just by having a few dozen people look at a related then an unrelated product in sequence, and for another pair have users tag them similarly with unique (obscure) values.

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Well, I can see how a coincidence of independent and non-malicious user-supplied tags might conspire. But I’d love to know whether the results were accidental or intentional. Now it seems possible that someone from the outside could have manipulated the rankings through strategically placed user tags, e.g., making good use of infrequently assigned tags. Think evil!

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A friend of mine pointed out that Amazon’s public relations team may have bigger fish to fry when it comes to damage control. I hadn’t been aware of the “rape simulator” game incident:

http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/local-national/amazon-selling-3d-rape-simulator-game-14183546.html

From a public relations perspective, that’s probably a lot more of an issue than the girl scout cookies query–and the game is truly disturbing. But I’m admittedly more concerned with understanding the quirks of their search functionality.

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