Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Amazon is replacing its TikTok-like Inspire with Rufus the AI bot

Amazon Inspire
Amazon

Amazon has shut down its TikTok-esque social shopping feed, Inspire, and will be replacing it with Rufus. By “Rufus,” we mean the AI shopping chatbot, not the naked mole rat from Kim Possible.

According to a report from The Information, Amazon users received a message from the online retail company saying that the Inspire feed was no longer available. The lightbulb icon that was used to access Inspire from the bottom of the Amazon app’s home screen also disappeared. Kevin King, the founder of the Billion Dollar Sellers newsletter, posted a screenshot of the message on LinkedIn, which reads, “Thank you for using Amazon Inspire to discover and shop new products on Amazon. Please note that Inspire is no longer available in the Amazon shopping app.”

Recommended Videos

The Inspire feed, which Amazon launched in 2023, provided an endless scroll of shoppable videos and images of products sold on the site posted by content creators and customers to demonstrate the use of said products and give testimonials on them. It was especially useful for content creators and influencers, as they would earn commissions from people buying the products immediately after viewing their content as part of the Amazon Influencer Program.

“We regularly evaluate various features to better align with what customers tell us matters most, and as part of that, Inspire is no longer available,” an Amazon spokesperson said.

While they didn’t further explain the reason why Inspire was shut down, it can be implied that it didn’t work as well as TikTok’s Discover page in converting sales and compelling influencers to post content on there more frequently, as they can earn income elsewhere. However, they did redirect customers to other means of receiving product recommendations, including Rufus.

Rufus is an AI shopping assistant that answers questions to customers in an effort to help them find the products that best suit their needs quicker. For example, you can ask “Best gifts for gamers,” and it’ll recommend gaming headsets, mice, chairs, and consoles. Rufus will then ask, “Can you share a bit about their favorite games or genres? For example, ‘They enjoy RPGs like Skyrim.'” You respond, “They play JRPGs like Kingdom Hearts and Fire Emblem,” and it’ll recommend merchandise based on the games mentioned or similar, such as a Funko Pop figure of a character from Ni no Kuni.

Amazon shutting down Inspire coincides with the legal drama surrounding TikTok, which recently returned to the App Store and Google Play in the U.S. following a letter Attorney General Pam Bondi sent to Apple and Google assuring them they won’t face any penalties related to the TikTok ban. The app was removed from both storefronts on January 18 as a result of a law that banned TikTok unless ByteDance sold it to an American company. Two days later, President Trump signed an executive order granting a 75-day stay on the ban while his administration figured out the best way forward.

How long the TikTok app will stay on the app stores is unknown. With Inspire gone from Amazon, it may be a little difficult for influencers to earn money from the content they post on the site. Although, it’s worth pointing out that Amazon Live, the live-streaming and live-shopping feature, is still active, so maybe not that hard.

Cristina Alexander
Cristina Alexander is a gaming and mobile writer at Digital Trends. She blends fair coverage of games industry topics that…
TikTok is fast becoming a pawn in US-China relations
TikTok app shutdown message in the US

President Donald J. Trump says TikTok must be sold to an American buyer, or it will be banned from operating in the United States. According to The Washington Post, ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, does not appear to be in a hurry to sell the popular social media platform as the clock ticks down, almost certainly due to influence from the Chinese government.

Following the U.S. imposition of significant tariffs on Chinese imports, which prompted a reciprocal response from China, experts now suggest that the Chinese government is “increasingly likely to take a hard-line approach” regarding selling TikTok’s U.S. operations to an American buyer. As such, despite a growing list of interested suitors, China reportedly hopes to negotiate a “grand deal” with the Trump administration. Any deal would require the U.S. to make trade and technology policy concessions.

Read more
This YouTuber just made the TikTok situation a lot more complicated
TikTok splash screen on an Android phone.

The fate of TikTok already hangs on a knife's edge, but well-known YouTuber Mr. Beast has announced interest in purchasing the app — along with a group of backers who have put together a bid worth at least $20 billion. The group of investors is a who's-who of tech CEOs, including David Baszucki, CEO of Roblox; Nathan McCauley, CEO of Anchorage Digital; and Jesse Tinsley, founder of Employer.com.

The exact bid amount isn't clear, but Tinsley told Bloomberg the group's proposed number is "significantly higher" than other bids, including the alleged $20 billion bid placed by Project Liberty. However, how much progress the team will make isn't clear, as Tinsley says the group hasn't had direct contact with ByteDance.

Read more
Don’t buy overpriced used iPhones with TikTok installed
Exploring TikTok's STEM feed on a phone.

If you want to download the TikTok app onto your iPhone and you live in the U.S., you’re currently out of luck due to an ongoing ban. Because of this, some would-be entrepreneurs are attempting to make a quick buck on eBay by selling iPhones with the TikTok app pre-installed.

People are attempting to sell used iPhones “Unlocked with TikTok App” on the site for as much as $50,000, as first noted by Wired. To make these deals even less appealing, some of these listings are for iPhone 12 Pro Max models first released in 2020, and not even the latest iPhone 16 models.

Read more