Tag Archives: books

Shedding More Light on the Amazon Controversy

Debbie says:

I was tired and outraged last night, and I didn’t say that the removal of Women En Large and Familiar Men, along with thousands of other titles with erotic or GLBT content from amazon.com’s indirect search functions was unlike their overall corporate policies and could have been something that was done too them.

Thanks to one of our commenters, I now see that it could have been a hack. I’m not qualified to judge the tech in this link, but a friend who is says she finds the post at the link highly plausible in some ways and dubious in others. If it is true, the motive was “let’s watch everyone scurry around and get incensed,” rather than “let’s keep those filthy gays out of children’s eyes.”

In any event, even if Amazon is eventually shown to have been hacked, I’m not about to let Amazon off the hook for leaving itself open for malicious users to do this so easily. And I note that it has not yet been fixed.

User content is one of the best things about Amazon. However, letting users flag content as “inappropriate” for the whole customer base, rather than for themselves, is probably a mistake. It’s certainly a mistake to let a few flags like that control the entire search apparatus for a gigantic operation. Perhaps more to the point, where did that customer service email come from?

Like it or not, understand it or not (and I’m working hard to understand it), the big-picture high-profile Internet prank is here to stay for a long time. The big commercial sites need to take the real world into account, try to think like the pranksters, and, most important, make public statements if they get caught out. I’d feel a lot better about Amazon if the issue was fixed by now, and if their front page, or their front books page, had a public statement describing the issue and repudiating the pranksters.

Amazon.com: Now Controlling Your Search Results for Your Own Good

Debbie says:

For technical and social (and vaguely religious) reasons, I’ve been largely out of touch for a couple of days. To my astonishment, I came back into touch to discover that amazon.com has rocked the LGBT and erotica worlds by making a complex decision that seems to affect all books by publishers with a focus on gay content, all books by erotica publishers, and a variety of other books that don’t fit that criteria … including our own Women En Large and Familiar Men.

Here’s the basic story from a gay publisher who wrote to Amazon when he noticed the change, and got a rather simplistic response.

In consideration of our entire customer base, we exclude “adult” material from appearing in some searches and best seller lists. Since these lists are generated using sales ranks, adult materials must also be excluded from that feature.

Hence, if you have further questions, kindly write back to us.

In other words, Amazon has decided that they don’t want you to find a potentially “offensive” book when you’re conducting a “harmless” search. If you are searching on “Giovanni” because of the opera, or your Italian cousin who writes travelogues, they don’t want you to have to see James Baldwin’s legendary Giovanni’s Room, a 1950s novel about gay men. Of course, their criteria don’t include, for example, heterosexual violent sex. You can search on “lamb” because you’re looking for recipes, and be confronted with Thomas Harris’s The Silence of the Lambs, a book I happen to deeply admire, which unquestioningly deals with vicious and graphic violence done to women and men by two male serial killers.

Click here to see what happens if you search on “homosexuality” on Amazon under the new policies. It’s scary.

The meta-writer community on LiveJournal is making a list of affected books. The list is extraordinary in its length (note the ten pages (!) of comments), its variety, and its stunning degree of cluelessness.

If Jacqueline Carey’s Kushiel books (fantasy novels with a kinky twist) are included, it’s not just small or specialty publishers. If Mary Renault’s The Charioteer (a 1959 mainstream historical novel with homophilic content and no sex) is included, it’s not about explicitness. If Jessica Valenti & Jaclyn Friedman,’s Yes Means Yes: Visions of Female Sexual Power and A World Without Rape is included, it’s not about titillation. If Randy Shilts’ And the Band Played On, a social history of AIDS, still shows its sales rank, it’s not about consistency. (Shilts’ other books have been blacked out.) The best guess I see online is that they made the call based on keywords and tags, blogging tools which are supposed to help us find the books we want.

An online petition to Amazon can be found here. When I signed, it was close to 8500 signatures.

Amazon.com should be ashamed of itself. This kind of blanket exclusion of certain kinds of titles is not what we expect from our premiere online bookseller. Some people

My best guess: they’re going to be really really sorry they did this. And that will result either in them undoing it as expeditiously as they can, or in them digging in their heels and claiming they’re proud of their decision. In which case, some enterprising smaller online store can make a lot of money making these books easy to find: notice how the small video stores profit from Blockbuster’s “no X-rated films, regardless of what else is true about them” policy?