Google now knows you have a broken laptop and can estimate how desperate you are to fix it.
Because it knows how desperate you are, it can increase shop prices proportionally.
You are going to pay the maximum they get you to pay.
That's algorithmic pricing.
The more companies know about you, the more they can predict and sell how desperate you are to other stores out there.
An internet-connected car knows much more about you than you realize. A smart TV also knows what you like. Your Alexa knows if there is a problem in the home.
Airline companies and hotels have been doing this for years. They track the location, time of year, and how frequently you're looking to adjust their prices for you. You can sometimes get a different price for the exact same flight or hotel by using a private browser. You know those freezer doors with the display in them instead of a glass panel? Those have a camera in them as well to track which ads you spend the most time looking at so they can roll the most viewed ads more frequently. Some grocery stores are attempting to roll out digital pricing systems in their stores so that they can "dynamically change prices on items due to demand."
It's only a small step from using an algorithm to create a profile on you to serve ads tailored to things that you're interested in to companies using that same profile to "dynamically adjust prices due to demand."
By the logic of this meme, pizza shops should raise the price of pizza for me because I proved I wanted pizza by walking in the door. It's an idiotic way to do business, and isn't happening the way this meme presents.
Again, that's literally what airlines and some hotels do. Based on how often you frequent the site and how often you search for flights for a specific date and location, they will change their prices for you specifically. The more interest you show and the closer it gets to that date, the higher the prices go. And your local pizza shop does this on a broad scale. They base their prices on demand - the more people willing to come in, the more they can raise their prices until they hit the threshold of what people are willing to pay.
This is literally just taking targeted ads and applying it to pricing. A cross section of different values can identify you as an individual based on things like browsing habits and web searches, and companies can use that digital fingerprint to tailor online prices for you the same way that the airlines do. Even at a broad scale, they can tailor prices based on your income level, hobbies, and predicted price tolerance. Hell, with this concept they could even run fake sales at an individual level instead of site-wide like Amazon does during their Prime Day "sales."
This is one of the more irrational fears/predictions about the dynamic pricing infrastructure grocery stores want to implement - that they'll start tailoring prices on things that you buy frequently or try to get you to buy extra with prices that look like a good deal. But it's a lot more practical to do online than in a physical store.
A financial asset is a series of cashflows. Your existence is a series of cashflows. Therefore, you are a financial asset. Advertisers, marketers, influencers, social media companies, big data, ai etc. are all in the business of predicting and directing those cashflows. It's very simple, that's where the money is. The monetization of everythimg is not a conspiracy theory, it's how the economy works.
Maybe it is a conspiracy theory,buyt it does feel plausible and I think that merits some concern that it could head in this direction if we keep allowing companies to leech into our lives. We already have ridiculous situations like the Disney+ lawsuit thing. Who know what hasn't surfaced yet?
No it's fucking not plausible, there are alternative search engines, the moment google pulls this it gets to the mainstream media and people switch to Ecosia, DuckDuckGo, whatever,, then Google is hit with a massive fine from the EU