"On a Thursday in early September, more than 40 strangers logged in to Instacart, the grocery-shopping app, to buy eggs and test a hypothesis.

Connected by videoconference, they simultaneously selected the same store — a Safeway in Washington, D.C. — and the same brand of eggs. They all chose pickup rather than delivery.

The only difference was the price they were offered: $3.99 for a couple of lucky shoppers. $4.59 or $4.69 for others. And a few saw a price of $4.79 — 20 percent more than some others, for the exact same product.

The shoppers were volunteers, participating in a study published on Tuesday and organized by the Groundwork Collaborative, a progressive policy group, and Consumer Reports, a nonprofit consumer publication. In tests in four cities across the country, nearly 200 volunteers checked prices on 20 grocery items on Instacart.

On item after item, they found significant differences. In a Target in North Canton, Ohio, some shoppers were charged $3.59 for a jar of Skippy peanut butter that others could get for $2.99. At a Safeway in Seattle, some people paid $3.99 for a box of Wheat Thins while others paid $4.89. And at a Target in St. Paul, Minn., some people were charged $4.59 for a box of Cheerios that others could get for $3.99.

“Two shoppers who are buying the exact same item from the exact same store at the exact same time are getting different prices,” said Lindsay Owens, executive director of the Groundwork Collaborative. “The data really backs up how extraordinarily pervasive this is.”
(...)
Groundwork’s findings are the latest example of how the notion of a single price, offered to all customers for a predictable period, is breaking down in the digital age. Companies are using sophisticated algorithms to adjust prices quickly in response to competitors’ offers and consumer behavior."

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/09/business/instacart-algorithmic-pricing.html

#USA #AlgorithmicPricing #DynamicPricing #Insatacart #Inflation #Algorithms

Same Product, Same Store, but on Instacart, Prices Might Differ

The findings are the latest example of how the notion of a single price is breaking down in the digital age, a trend economists say could be pushing up some prices.

The New York Times
@remixtures There's two ways to price a product for sale.

• You can choose to charge a fair and reasonable mark-up over your own costs.
• Or you can charge what the market will bear.

Guess which one America picks.
@zakalwe @remixtures the same that corporations everywhere will choose given half a chance.
@Gurre @remixtures Not enough people understand that driving your customer base into penury is not a long-term survival; strategy. But then, modern business schools do not teach long-term thinking. They teach that nothing matters except the bottom line on this quarter's balance sheet.
@zakalwe @remixtures Every company in every country does this, this is not unique to America. It’s a feature of capitalism. The counterbalance comes from healthy competition and regulation. That is where the weakness is.
@remixtures another good reason to go to a physical.store and read the price label on the shelf!
@kcpoole @remixtures AND make sure they charge you the price on the shelf. Target has been known to ring you up higher.
@orrickle @kcpoole @remixtures And Safeway, claiming that the price on the shelf was with an internet coupon (not so marked).
@remixtures sorry for the off-topic, but $4.59 for how many eggs? 24? Because I'm European and those prices look insane to me
@sabrinaweb71 @remixtures I paid $6.49 for a dozen eggs recently, but that is for the high-dollar, pasture-raised “humane” eggs. Regular eggs are less than $4.00. I rarely buy eggs, so the price doesn’t bother me.
@Galley @remixtures still it's more than twice what I pay

@sabrinaweb71 @Galley @remixtures

As-Organic-As-They-Get in my zone (Emilia Romagna, Italy) cost 7 EUR a dozen, tops.

Dept-Store-Organic cost about 5 EUR a dozen, while regular cost 3 EUR a dozen, tops.

@sabrinaweb71 @remixtures I just paid 4.something for the cheapest dozen at the store yesterday. It was a bit more than half the price of the next lowest dozen, which was in the high $7.something The 18's were well above $10.

@sabrinaweb71 A dozen, according to the study:

"Almost three quarters (74%) of grocery items in the experiment were offered to shoppers at multiple price points on Instacart. The platform offered as many as five different sales prices for the exact same grocery item, in the exact same store, at the exact same time. A dozen Lucerne eggs sold for $3.99, $4.28, $4.59, $4.69, and $4.79 on Instacart at a Safeway store in Washington, D.C. A box of Clif Chocolate Chip Energy bars (10 count) sold for $19.43, $19.99, and $21.99 on Instacart at a Safeway store in Seattle."

https://groundworkcollaborative.org/work/instacart/

Same Cart, Different Price: Instacart’s Price Experiments Cost Families at Checkout - Groundwork Collaborative

Groundwork Collaborative
@sabrinaweb71 @remixtures For that money, I can get the best 6 organic eggs in Germany, where the chickens are probably put to bed individually and have names. 😂
@leobm with the hen’s name on the cartoon or individually printed on the shells 🥺
@remixtures super fun how they're always thinking up new ways to make capitalism worse. that's where the infinite growth is happening!
@remixtures we need an insider to leak the pricing algorithm.

@earthshine @remixtures

Here's an interesting thought experiment on sabotaging price gouging AI:

Large groups ordering eggs all together, then canceling the order.

It'll bump up the price until a dozen eggs costs $200.

No one buys the eggs and Trump donor Mountaire Foods & Ron Cameron has less money to fund a fascist movement.

https://www.reuters.com/technology/artificial-intelligence/trump-revokes-biden-executive-order-addressing-ai-risks-2025-01-21/

https://www.cnn.com/2025/12/08/tech/trump-eo-blocking-ai-state-laws

https://www.cnn.com/2025/12/10/politics/data-center-arizona-kyrsten-sinema-trump

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2025-11-10/the-three-a-s-in-the-trump-economy-ai-asset-prices-and-the-affluent

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What Happened When Five AI Models Fact-Checked Trump

President Donald Trump is an AI booster, write Yale SOM’s Jeffrey Sonnenfeld and co-authors Stephen Henriques and Steven Tian. So they thought it was fair to ask the leading chatbots to evaluate some of Trump’s frequently repeated claims.

Yale Insights
@remixtures FFS just go to the store. In-person shopping won't be completely enshittified by this abhorration for at least a little while longer, and it also signals to these SV fucks that we don't take this kind of crap.
Thoughts on dynamic pricing at stores

YouTube

@remixtures I'm glad this shite is so illegal in #Germany that noone dared that.

@remixtures

Gotta love capitalism. Otherwise, gotta leave it.

@remixtures
I've seen amazon do it too, but not rigorously tested.
@remixtures Are the same people always offered the higher prices?
@remixtures
This looks like dynamic pricing, one of the reasons I try and keep away from the self checkout cameras and pay in cash where I can. Paranoid? It would be if it wasn't happening.