(no title)
Travis | 13 years ago
I also guess that tactics like these will erode user trust over time.
But most users are neither savvy nor concerned with things like this, in my experience. They may be annoyed with it, but the majority of people simply don't apply any meta-analysis to the sites they use, as we so often do here on HN.
I'd guess that they use these techniques because they are successful. So that's an interesting dilemma -- how can a (public) company decide which ethical path to take? If they don't use these techniques, they are doing their bottom line a disservice. If they do use them, they are crossing into a grey area of ethics.
What are companies (startups, especially) supposed to decide, between a slightly grey area success or an ethical failure?
PS - I know that's a bit of a false dichotomy, but making it a black-and-white issue simplifies it for discussion.
saraid216|13 years ago
Travis|13 years ago
In the hope you see this, I have another question for you: in the startup world, what recourse is there against unethical competition? Some companies like Uber (esp. in Boston, NYC), are able to fight the good fight. Others, like Padmapper, are trying to do so.
But for the majority of companies, legal recourse (especially looking for legislative redress rather than establishing case law) is not an option. What should an ethical startup do when faced with acting unethically (yet similar to established competiton) or not existing?
Again, thank you for putting the price->ethics perspective so elegantly.