Re: Exorbitant Data > Exorbitant Privilege
To be honest, I think Walmart basically solved the economic calculation problem 30 years ago, and Amazon has only refined the solution since. Neither really uses price signals for feedback. They have realtime JIT inventory management. Price signals are a blunt instrument in comparison. Put another way, nobody bids for stuff there, the prices are set algorithmically, and the volume of goods moving at any time is centrally measured, and they "Rollback" prices or re-arrange shelf space accordingly when the flow of goods slows or speeds up. Amazon is even more crafty. They blatantly violate the Robinson Patman Act and adjust prices based on your browsing behavior and other data. They set prices at a blistering rate, not based on demand or market exchange, but based on a host of behavioral data and profiling. With tools like these, we're already basically running a centrally planned economy. In fact, I don't think most capitalists ever really had much of an issue with that idea. It's the equality part that's dangerous, not the centralization, which is the whole point of having a giant firm in the first place. So I think your underlying point there is totally right. I just also think a lack of communism won't stop the same tools from being used in that same way under other systems of political economy.
Originally posted by llanlad2
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