Someone replied to his Twitter post on this topic with an interesting point:<p><a href="https://twitter.com/b6n/status/258785250145087488" rel="nofollow">https://twitter.com/b6n/status/258785250145087488</a><p>The message "This price was set by the publisher" only appears when he's logged in. That message is a tipoff that the book is sold under the agency model, where the publisher sets the price and Amazon takes a cut off the top. Under the agency rules, Amazon had no choice but to sell at that price.<p>HarperCollins, the publisher of this book, was one of the three publishers that settled with the DoJ in the lawsuit that accused the publishers of colluding with Apple to use the agency model to impose price-fixing on ebooks. As part of the settlement they agreed to knock it off. [1] But obviously the DoJ does not have jurisdiction outside the USA, so they presumably would still be free to force that model elsewhere.<p>Tim Bray is based in Canada, so if he's logged in Amazon presumably would treat it as a Canadian sale, and still sell the book under the agency pricing?<p>edit to add: I tried going to Amazon.ca to see what they'd show a US-based customer, but they don't seem to show me Kindle versions of that book at all.<p>[1] <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/09/06/apple-ebooks-idUSL2E8K6GI720120906" rel="nofollow">http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/09/06/apple-ebooks-idUSL...</a>
I think the international price explains the difference:<p>Logged in as "me, US guy with US credit card, US registered Kindle, shipping address, etc..", I get $9.48.<p>With an anonymous browser window, here in Italy, I get:
$14.27 includes VAT* & free international wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet.
Tim works for Google who is widely known to test everything and show all sorts of different stuff to different people, how is he surprised that he sees different pricing based on his log-in status? He should also be clever enough to figure out the international/domestic difference (as a US customer I see the same pricing as he does when not logged in).
The first screenshot says "includes applicable taxes", the second does not. And as mentioned by siblings, the first screenshot has the "price set by the publisher" disclaimer while the second does not.<p>I would imagine that if he attempted to check out as an anonymous user, as soon as he put in his address, the first price would be shown.
I don't know about other countries, but I'm fairly sure showing two different prices at the same time to two different customers is completely illegal in France.
Amazon also adds about $1-$2 to pay for WhisperSync for each Kindle eBook sale outside the limited countries where it's free. So books that cost $9.99 in the US cost $11.99 or so when bought from the Africa-specific Kindle store on Amazon.com.<p>I don't think that applies in this case, which seems to be as a result of either Canadian Value Added Tax and/or the agency model, but it's why prices in other countries might seem to differ from the price you see when you're just browsing Amazon.com.
Our entire business is about giving ecommerce stores the ability to price discriminate algorithmically. Our servers aren't being malicious they are only charging you the most you are willing to pay.<p>If you don't like a product then don't buy it, the price will most likely come down. It might be hard for people to understand how cold the mathematics and economics are but it really does go both ways.
For me it is slightly different:
When I login "Indian guy with Indian credit card, Indian registered Kindle, Indian shipping address, etc..", I get $9.21.
With an anonymous browser window, in India, I get: $9.48, no taxes and free international wireless delivery.
I guess this is just third-world / first-world price discrimination.
Hmm. Meanwhile, on amazon.co.uk I am offered £6.99 including VAT and told "This price was set by the publisher".<p>This is roughly the same as the $9.48 Amazon-set price that Tim sees, plus 20% VAT.