Getting a Vaccine Should Be Easier Than Getting a PlayStation

Our experience battling bots to get a gaming console highlights the inequities of vaccine distribution

Rachael Uriarte
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The Charleston Convention Center and Coliseum in West Virginia on February 13, 2021. Photo: SOPA Images/Getty Images

At my makeshift work-from-home desk on our dining table, my Mac, iPhone, and iPad were all open to Best Buy’s page for the PlayStation 5. A few feet away from me in his home office, my husband, Max, also had his Mac, iPad, and iPhone open to the same Best Buy page. As the clock on our devices edged closer towards 10 a.m. Pacific Standard Time, all I could hear was the sound of our furious repeated tapping of the refresh buttons on all six of our devices as we both stared intently at our respective clocks. The stakes were high: We had been trying for over a month to get a PS5, but every time we neared the finish line and were able to add the item to our cart, they were sold out before we could even complete the purchase.

It was us versus the bots.

Bots (computer programs designed to perform repetitive online tasks) wreaked havoc on Christmas shoppers trying to get their hands on Sony’s latest console. They became known online as “Grinch bots”, as digital scalpers swiped up all stock in a matter of seconds, with consumers then finding them on sites like eBay paying triple the price. Walmart reported to the Washington Post

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Rachael Uriarte
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British. Writer and Conservationist. Child of the Commonwealth.