Skip to main content

Amazon deploys AI to summarize product reviews

Amazon has started using artificial intelligence (AI) to generate summaries of reviews for some of its listings.

The idea is that it will speed up the shopping experience for time-pressed customers who don’t want to trawl through endless reviews left by other shoppers.

The feature was spotted by Mark Wieczorek, chief technology officer at New York City-based marketing agency Fortress Brand.

Wieczorek shared one of the summaries, which includes a note at the end saying: “AI-generated from the text of customer reviews.”

The AI-generated review is for an air purifier and says:

This air purifier has received positive feedback from customers in various aspects. Many customers have praised its ability to clear the air and improve air quality, with some even calling it the best air purifying device. The product is also quiet and effective in removing smells, with customers appreciating its stylish appearance. However, some customers have expressed mixed opinions on its effectiveness in reducing allergies and asthma.

At the current time, the AI-generated summaries are only showing on Amazon’s mobile site, and for select products.

Amazon hasn’t made any public announcement about the new feature but said in a widely reported statement that it is “significantly investing in generative AI” across all of its businesses. Hopefully, some of that investment will lead to AI capable of weeding out fake reviews on the site.

Following the frenzied interest in the new wave of generative-AI products such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard chatbots, companies big and small have been looking at how they can overhaul their businesses using different elements of the powerful technology.

Amazon’s interest in AI was confirmed by the contents of several job ads that it posted last month. One of the listings — for a senior software development engineer — said the company is aiming to overhaul its search process “with an interactive conversational experience that helps you find answers to product questions, perform product comparisons, receive personalized product suggestions, and so much more, to easily find the perfect product for your needs.” This sounds a lot like chatbots such as ChatGPT, which have the ability to converse in a very human-like way.

Another listing was for a senior technical program manager who will work on what Amazon describes as an “AI-first initiative to re-architect and reinvent the way we do search through the use of extremely large scale next-generation deep learning techniques.”

It’s not clear when the changes to Amazon’s search process will be implemented, but the company is evidently determined to deploy AI across its shopping site.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Amazon’s latest purchase aims to speed up your deliveries
Amazon Prime Air

Amazon’s enormous and highly complex shipping operation has been given a boost with the purchase of 11 Boeing 767-300 jets.

The move is notable as it’s the first time the online shopping giant has opted to purchase -- rather than lease -- aircraft to transport products around the country.

Read more
Amazon may have big plans for some Sears and J.C. Penney sites
Amazon Logo

Amazon is reportedly in talks with major U.S. mall operator Simon Property Group over a plan to convert vacated department stores into distribution hubs for the online shopping behemoth.

Malls have taken a battering in recent years as more and more customers hop online to shop from the comfort of their own home. The emergence of COVID-19 at the start of 2020 hasn’t helped, either, with stay-at-home orders and general safety concerns prompting even more people to steer clear of brick-and-mortar stores and shop online instead.

Read more
Amazon planning June discount event to jump-start sales, report says
Amazon logo on the headquarters building.

The coronavirus crisis has hit some sellers hard, with many online shoppers in recent months focusing on essentials over other kinds of purchases while they wait and see how the pandemic pans out.

Hoping to provide a much-needed boost for its third-party sellers, Amazon is close to announcing a one-off “fashion summer sale event," according to CNBC News, which saw an internal document about the initiative.

Read more