This paper explores the trade-off between the short-term benefits of false quality advertisements against the longer term costs of reputation damage. A directed search model is constructed in which submarkets are created by the advertisements and reputations of sellers. A reputation system links misleading advertisements in the present period to a lower reputation in the next period. We show that a reputation system always increases the prices of high quality products and directs search more accurately towards the sellers with such products. We also show that buyers are hurt by a reputation system if the market is thin -- has few sellers -- because the equilibrium increase in prices is greater than the equilibrium increase in the quality of...
The traditional understanding of reputation systems is that they secure trust between strangers by p...
Reputation systems aim to induce honest behavior in online trade by providing information about past...
Arguing that consumers are the carriers of firms’ reputations, we examine the role of consumer netwo...
Buyers in online markets pay higher prices to sellers who promise a highquality product in auctions ...
In economic approaches it is often argued that reputation considerations influence the behavior of i...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2012. Major: Economics. Advisor:Patrick Bajari, T...
Session 85: Topics in InformationThis paper investigates the e§ect of competition on the reputation ...
In today’s online markets, the reputation mechanism undergoes its most successful propagation in hum...
We analyze how di erent dimensions of a seller's reputation a ect pricing power in electronic market...
We experimentally compare low-information, high-information and self-reporting reputation mechanis...
Online reputation systems are certainly the most overlooked 'heroes' of today's social Web. While th...
We introduce a search model where products differ in variety and unobserved quality (`experience goo...
This paper examines a market where buyers cannot judge the quality of the good they receive until af...
In Internet transactions, customers and service providers often interact once and anonymously. To pr...
The traditional understanding of reputation systems is that they secure trust between strangers by p...
Reputation systems aim to induce honest behavior in online trade by providing information about past...
Arguing that consumers are the carriers of firms’ reputations, we examine the role of consumer netwo...
Buyers in online markets pay higher prices to sellers who promise a highquality product in auctions ...
In economic approaches it is often argued that reputation considerations influence the behavior of i...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2012. Major: Economics. Advisor:Patrick Bajari, T...
Session 85: Topics in InformationThis paper investigates the e§ect of competition on the reputation ...
In today’s online markets, the reputation mechanism undergoes its most successful propagation in hum...
We analyze how di erent dimensions of a seller's reputation a ect pricing power in electronic market...
We experimentally compare low-information, high-information and self-reporting reputation mechanis...
Online reputation systems are certainly the most overlooked 'heroes' of today's social Web. While th...
We introduce a search model where products differ in variety and unobserved quality (`experience goo...
This paper examines a market where buyers cannot judge the quality of the good they receive until af...
In Internet transactions, customers and service providers often interact once and anonymously. To pr...
The traditional understanding of reputation systems is that they secure trust between strangers by p...
Reputation systems aim to induce honest behavior in online trade by providing information about past...
Arguing that consumers are the carriers of firms’ reputations, we examine the role of consumer netwo...