IS SWOOPO A VERY LOOSE FORM OF ONLINE GAMBLING?
17 July 2009
The new online auction site certainly has a
money-making model
A MacBook Pro laptop worth $1 400 that goes for $35.86
sounds too good to be true, but according to reports in
the online publication The Atlantic, that is typical of
the auction action at online bidding site Swoopo.
But the real money is probably behind the scenes, in
Swoopo's business model, reports the publication, which
researched the site's money making ways. "For each
'bid,' the price of the computer goes up by a penny and
Swoopo collects 60 cents, The Atlantic found. "To get up
to $35.86, it takes, yes, an incredible 3 585 bids, for
each of which Swoopo gets its fee. That means that
before selling this computer, Swoopo took in $2 151 in
bidding fees."
The Atlantic's Jonah Lehrer asks
why the site is so popular, and reports: "I think the
real appeal of the website is the sheer uncertainty. As
an item nears the end of bidding, a big countdown clock
appears. At any moment, someone else can come in and bid
on the item, which then resets the clock to twenty
seconds. The process repeats and repeats, until the
price gets to a point that discourages other bidders.
(It's probably less discouraging to you, since you've
already sunk $50 in bidding fees.)
"But here's
the secret of the site: after placing a bid, you're
forced to wait and watch. You have no way of knowing if
your bid will win, or if someone else will swoop in and
bid on the laptop at the last possible second. In other
words, it's just like a slot machine: you put in a
quarter and wait for the wheels to whirr. With swoopo,
the random number generator is other people."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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