Potentially uncomfortable but true: if you're doing A/B testing *of any kind* on users who did not explicitly consent to be part of such a test, you're performing unethical research on human subjects.
(Repost dug up from an old
thread of mine.)
Potentially uncomfortable but true: if you're doing A/B testing *of any kind* on users who did not explicitly consent to be part of such a test, you're performing unethical research on human subjects.
(Repost dug up from an old
thread of mine.)
@dalias Maybe, or maybe it highlights a problem with the 'any unauthorized experiment'.
It would include things like, for example, a fruit vendor setting up in different ways to see what sells best, which has probably been done since forever and trying to ban it sounds completely deranged.
Or maybe that is unethical, but it doesn't matter, the humans are all unethical sacks of shit all the time anyway.
I don't like either of these.
So, maybe the difference is some other variable...?
Fair, but, to play devil's advocate for a moment, what's different from getting fruit of different quality from the vendor?
Intent?
Ok, so one difference is that the fruit seller wouldn't try to sell worse product, just to see if he could get away with it.
No, wait, he would, but he'd be evil.