Malicious Selling Strategies in Livestream E-commerce: A Case Study of Alibaba’s Taobao and ByteD...
Qunfang Wu, Yisi Sang, Dakuo Wang, Zhicong Lu
CHI 2024: The ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Session: Online Toxicity
Due to the limitations imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, customers have shifted their shopping patterns from offline to online. Livestream shopping has become popular as one of the online shopping media. However, various streamers’ malicious selling behaviors have been reported. In this research, we sought to explore streamers’ malicious selling strategies and understand how viewers perceive these strategies. First, we recorded 40 livestream shopping sessions from two popular livestream platforms in China—Taobao, and TikTok. We identified 16 malicious selling strategies that were used to deceive, coerce, or manipulate viewers and found that platform designs enhanced nine of the malicious selling strategies. Second, through an interview study with 13 viewers, we report three challenges of overcoming malicious selling in relation to imbalanced power between viewers, streamers, and the platforms. We conclude by discussing the policy and design implications of countering malicious selling.
Web:: https://programs.sigchi.org/chi/2024/program/content/150847
Pre-recorded video presentations for Journals at CHI 2024
Qunfang Wu, Yisi Sang, Dakuo Wang, Zhicong Lu
CHI 2024: The ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Session: Online Toxicity
Due to the limitations imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, customers have shifted their shopping patterns from offline to online. Livestream shopping has become popular as one of the online shopping media. However, various streamers’ malicious selling behaviors have been reported. In this research, we sought to explore streamers’ malicious selling strategies and understand how viewers perceive these strategies. First, we recorded 40 livestream shopping sessions from two popular livestream platforms in China—Taobao, and TikTok. We identified 16 malicious selling strategies that were used to deceive, coerce, or manipulate viewers and found that platform designs enhanced nine of the malicious selling strategies. Second, through an interview study with 13 viewers, we report three challenges of overcoming malicious selling in relation to imbalanced power between viewers, streamers, and the platforms. We conclude by discussing the policy and design implications of countering malicious selling.
Web:: https://programs.sigchi.org/chi/2024/program/content/150847
Pre-recorded video presentations for Journals at CHI 2024
- Catégories
- E commerce Divers
- Mots-clés
- CHI 2024, SIGCHI
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