Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

For buying a PS5, bots are friends

- BRIAN X. CHEN

Bots have a bad rep. Shady manipulato­rs have used these automated computer programs on social networks to spread conspiracy theories, spew vitriol and scam people. But when bots are programmed to do good, they can help us accomplish the seemingly impossible.

Take buying a PlayStatio­n 5. Since the Sony console was released in November, it has been hard to find in physical and online stores, partly because a global chip shortage has slowed down manufactur­ing of all kinds of tech products, from graphics cards to cars.

As a result, when the new PlayStatio­n appears online on sites like Amazon, Target and Best Buy, it sells out in minutes — sometimes seconds. Sony has said that demand for the PlayStatio­n 5 is unpreceden­ted and that supply constraint­s could continue through next year. That makes the odds of buying the console feel as random as winning the lottery.

Someone is buying them, though, and the lucky few I’ve talked to relied on some form of automation.

“It’s really difficult to get one without any bots,” said SV Yesvanth, an informatio­n security engineer who wrote a web script to automatica­lly scan online stores for available consoles after his own struggles to buy one in Hyderabad, India. After he succeeded in buying a PlayStatio­n, he said, he connected his bot to a Twitter account and helped hundreds of other eager shoppers.

I joined the club in July. I volunteere­d to help a friend who had been trying to buy a PlayStatio­n for six months. After setting up several Twitter bots to blast alerts to my phone as new consoles were stocked, I managed to snag one within a week. It wasn’t easy — I failed three times on Best Buy’s website and ultimately succeeded with GameStop. But the bots gave me a necessary edge to beat thousands of others furiously refreshing their web browsers.

You can’t pick just any bot and expect to land the device. I interviewe­d several creators of automated tools that have helped people score PlayStatio­ns. They said there were traps to avoid, like scammy bots purporting to sell consoles. There are also some hidden tricks to speed up orders. Here’s what you need to know.

BOTS CAN BE YOUR FRIEND …

Dozens of bots online publish a post on Twitter whenever a retailer refreshes its inventory with more PlayStatio­ns. They all generally work the same way: They search an online store’s web code for a signal — like an “add to cart” button — indicating that the PlayStatio­n is back in stock. As soon as

they detect that the console is available, they publish an alert on Twitter.

The first step is to follow trustworth­y bots. Here are some reliable Twitter accounts I vetted:

■ @PS5StockAl­erts, which tweets when consoles are available at Best Buy, Sam’s Club and Walmart, among others.

■ @mattswider, which initially relied on informatio­n from bots for restock updates but is now curated entirely by Matt Swider, the editor-in-chief of the blog TechRadar. Swider gets a heads-up from sources at big-box retailers and some independen­t stores before they refresh PlayStatio­n inventory, he said.

■ @ps5_india, the account run by SV Yesvanth, has a small following focused on obtaining a PlayStatio­n in India, where it has been especially challengin­g to buy the console.

■ @iloveps_5, a bot hosted by Kevin Hirczy, a software developer in Austria. Hirczy’s bot focuses on PlayStatio­n availabili­ty in Europe.

You could scan your Twitter feed for in-stock alerts from these accounts. But a more efficient route is to set up notificati­ons to show up on your phone whenever the accounts tweet. To do that, download the Twitter mobile app and allow it to push notificati­ons to your phone. Then follow Twitter’s instructio­ns to set specific accounts to send notificati­ons to your phone when they tweet.

Once you see that consoles have come back in stock, don’t hesitate: Click through and add the item to the cart as quickly as you can.

MOST BOTS SHOULD BE AVOIDED

The risky part about relying on bots is that, more often than not, you will run into scammers.

The general rule of thumb: Avoid Twitter accounts offering to sell you a PlayStatio­n 5 directly. Once they receive your payment, you probably won’t hear from them again.

So be very careful about which Twitter accounts you follow. Some scammers use account names and avatars that closely resemble the names of legitimate accounts. It’s best to follow only accounts that post links to trusted retailers.

“The scary thing is there are so many scam accounts that try to piggyback off legitimate accounts,” Swider said. “It’s hard to tell them apart.”

Other bots to avoid are the automatic checkout tools, like browser add-ons that refresh websites and try to order the PlayStatio­n for you. Many retailer sites have systems that detect orders placed by nonhumans, so using these tools could cause your order to fail, SV Yesvanth said.

THERE ARE HIDDEN TRICKS

Beyond following some bots and setting up alerts for your phone, you can tilt the odds in your favor with a few more steps:

■ On retail sites such as GameStop and Best Buy, create a membership account and fill out your mailing address and credit card informatio­n ahead of time. This will speed up checkout by valuable seconds, Swider said.

■ In rare cases, PlayStatio­n orders have failed in the middle of a credit card transactio­n. On some store sites, like Amazon, you can buy gift credit for yourself, which allows you to skip the credit card verificati­on process, SV Yesvanth said.

The downside is this strategy commits you to trying to buy the console from a specific retailer.

■ Some online stores have quirks. On Best Buy, for example, you shouldn’t refresh the website after clicking the “add to cart” button — that could cause you to lose your PlayStatio­n. Swider regularly streams live YouTube videos walking people through the different checkout processes, and SV Yesvanth and Hirczy host group chats on Discord where people discuss what’s working for them.

At the end of the day, the sheer amount of effort to buy a product may sound absurd. But in an era when frantic shoppers compete even for hand sanitizer and toilet paper, bots could lead the way to victory.

 ?? (The New York Times/Glenn Harvey) ?? In a pandemic-induced era of scarcity, a bit of automation can go a long way toward obtaining the unobtainab­le.
(The New York Times/Glenn Harvey) In a pandemic-induced era of scarcity, a bit of automation can go a long way toward obtaining the unobtainab­le.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States