To answer the question of "why" even use affiliate shopping sites, Rakuten has paid me a non-insignificant amount of cash back over the years. It's not much but it's better than zero. Sometimes other sites pay a little more, but I'm loathe to join multiple "ecosystems" just for a few pennies. Besides Rakuten, my fallback options are Chase Shop or Capital One Shopping (only the latter requires a browser extension IIRC).
These are not "scams" but ways for consumers to get a little of the marketing money that is flowing around.
FWIW Rakuten has excellent customer service (i.e. "where's my cash back?"). They mail me a quarterly check; I considered linking to PayPal but when they threw up a bunch of legalese, I balked.
Nobody reads TOS/EULAs, not even nerds like us. lxskllr is giving people WAYYYY too much credit.
These are not "scams" but ways for consumers to get a little of the marketing money that is flowing around.
FWIW Rakuten has excellent customer service (i.e. "where's my cash back?"). They mail me a quarterly check; I considered linking to PayPal but when they threw up a bunch of legalese, I balked.
Not watching the exposé video, but I don't consider this egregious behavior. Yeah rewriting the affiliate tracker is a bit scummy, but in essence they are the last click. And as you explained, they are saving consumers money, even if they are siphoning away a small portion.But Honey was somewhat doing what it said for consumers: finding coupon codes and applying them (even if it was doing a bad job or partnering with some businesses to limit the distribution of good codes). They were likely making the bulk of money by stealing on the affiliate referral side. I don't see how the typical consumer would identify that or understand what was going on there. It wasn't necessarily making the consumer the product in a way that would turn off the consumer.
I think it's pretty unreasonable to expect people to really understand the ins and outs of everything they are using in the modern age. Are you expecting everyone to read through pages of TOS and EULAs on everything they use too?
Nobody reads TOS/EULAs, not even nerds like us. lxskllr is giving people WAYYYY too much credit.