To Brush or Not to Brush: Product Rankings, Consumer Search, and Fake Orders
研究电商平台中商家刷单(虚假订单)对产品排名和消费者选择的影响,发现提高刷单成本或降低搜索成本可能反而损害消费者福利,排名算法设计也至关重要。
Brushing—online merchants placing fake orders of their own products—has been a widespread phenomenon on major e-commerce platforms. One key reason why merchants brush is that it boosts their rankings in search results. Products with higher sales volume are more likely to rank higher. Additionally, rankings matter because consumers face search frictions and narrow their attention to only the few products that show up at the top. Thus, fake orders can affect consumer choice. In our paper, we find that if brushing gets more costly for merchants (e.g., due to stricter platform policies), it may sometimes surprisingly harm consumers as it may only blunt brushing by the merchant who sells a more popular product but intensify brushing by the merchant selling a less popular product. If search is less costly for consumers (e.g., due to improved search technologies), it may not always benefit consumers, either. Moreover, the design of the ranking algorithm is critical: placing more weight on sales-volume-related factors may trigger a nonmonotone change in consumer welfare; tracking recent sales only as opposed to cumulative sales does not always dial down brushing and, in fact, may sometimes cause the merchant selling a less popular product to brush more.