Comparison Shopping Is Not a (Computer) Crime
As long as people have had more than one purchasing option, theyβve been comparing those options and looking for bargains. Online shoppers are no exception; in fact, one of the potential benefits of the internet is that it expands our options for everything from car rentals to airline tickets to dish soap. New AI tools can make the process even easier. These tools could provide some welcome relief for consumers facing sky-high prices that many cannot afford.
Unfortunately, Amazon is trying to block these helpful new tools, which can steer shoppers towards competitors. Taking a page from Facebook and RyanAir, they areΒ trying to use computer crime laws to do it.Β
Amazonβs target is Perplexity, which makes an AI-enabled web browser, called Comet, that allows users to browse the web as they normally would, but can also perform certain actions on the userβs behalf. For example, a user could ask Comet to find the best price on a 24-pack of toilet paper, and if satisfied with the results, have the browser order it. Amazon claims that Perplexity violated the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) by building a tool that helps users access information on Amazon and engage with the site.
Unfortunately, a federal district court agreed. The courtβs fundamental mistake: relying on the Ninth Circuitβs misguided decision in Facebook v Power Ventures,Β rather than the courtβs much better and more applicable reasoning in hiQ Labs.
Perplexity has appealed to the Ninth Circuit. As we explain in an amicus brief filed in support, the district courtβs mistake, if affirmed, could lead to myriad unintended consequences. Overbroad readings of the CFAA have undermined research, security, competition, and innovation. For years, weβve worked to limit its scope to Congressβs original intention: actual hacking that bypasses computer security. It should have nothing to do with Amazonβs claims here, not least because most of Amazonβs website is publicly available.
The courtβs approach would be especially dangerous for journalists and academic researchers. Researchers often create a variety of testing accounts. For example, if theyβre researching how a service displays housing offers, they may create separate accounts associated with different race, gender, or language settings. These sorts of techniques may be adversarial to the company, but they shouldnβt be illegal. But according to the courtβs opinion, if a company disagrees with this sort of research, it canβt just ban the researchers from using the site; it can render that research criminal by just sending a letter notifying the researcher that theyβre not authorized to use the service in this way.
A broad reading of CFAA in this case would also undermine competition by enabling companies to limit data scraping, effectively cutting off one of the ways websites offer tools to compare prices and features.
The Ninth Circuit should follow Van Burenβs lead and interpret the CFAA narrowly, as Congress intended. Website owners do not need new shields against independent accountability.

