Amazon: Does the Online Bookstore Sell Petards?

March 14, 2022

What happens when an Amazon wizard says something that allows a real news outfit to write:

In 2020, Jeff Bezos, then the company’s CEO, told the committee Amazon doesn’t allow staff to use data from individual sellers to make competing products, but couldn’t guarantee “that policy has never been violated.” Executives also said in testimony that the company doesn’t use seller data to copy products and then promote its versions in search results, despite reports to the contrary. Source: “DOJ Asked to Investigate Amazon over Possible Obstruction of Congress”?

What’s a petard? A search of Amazon reveals that it thinks it is a way to find a book in French which seems like to inflame Tennessee local school board officials. See “Peanut Butter: The Journal de Molly Fredickson”.

The petard of which I am thinking is “hoist by your own petard.” It means, according to the Free Dictionary:

Injured, ruined, or defeated by one’s own action, device, or plot that was intended to harm another; having fallen victim to one’s own trap or schemes. (“Hoist” in this instance is the past participle of the archaic verb “hoist,” meaning to be raised or lifted up. A “petard” was a bell-shaped explosive used to breach walls, doors, and so on.)

Saying one thing under oath and having elected officials learn facts that suggest otherwise is not a credibility booster.

Would senior wizards for the online bookstore dissemble?

Yep, just like some other executives when they say, “Senator, thank you for that question. I don’t know, but I will get back to you.”

Stephen E Arnold, March 14, 2022

Comments

Comments are closed.

  • Archives

  • Recent Posts

  • Meta