We all saw this headline. Amazon versus Perplexity. It’s a classic tech brawl: the established giant protecting its turf versus the disruptive upstart wielding the shiny new weapon of Agentic AI. But look closer, and you see a far more profound clash over who owns the customer interaction, and it has massive, flashing warning signs for our own industry.
This Perplexity “Comet” tool is essentially a personal AI shopping agent. You tell it what you want, and it goes and executes the task on your behalf, logging in with your credentials and making the purchase. Amazon is crying foul, alleging covert access, disguised bot activity, and a degraded customer experience. They’re arguing, in effect, “Your code is trespassing.”
Now, forget the retail angle for a moment. This is a direct preview of the battle coming to travel and hospitality. Agentic AI—a tool that acts for the user—is the future of distribution. When a traveler can simply tell their AI agent, “Find and book me a five-star hotel near the Louvre for this weekend, within this budget, including a reservation at a top-rated local bistro,” what happens to your direct booking site? What happens to the OTA’s control over the search results?
Amazon’s core allegation—that the AI agent is degrading the curated shopping experience—is the key. Amazon has built a multi-billion-dollar business on controlling the user journey, serving ads, and suggesting upsells. An AI agent, optimizing purely for user value (best price, best product), bypasses all that carefully engineered friction. It fundamentally threatens the ad-driven, suggestion-based revenue models that prop up much of the digital economy.
The parallel to hospitality is stark. Will hotels allow an external AI agent to bypass their own carefully constructed websites, their loyalty prompts, their upsell modules, simply to execute the fastest, most convenient transaction for the guest? Amazon’s move is a defense of the funnel. It’s them saying, “You will play by my rules, or you will not play on my field.”
The question isn’t whether Agentic AI is coming; it’s here. The question is whether our industry is prepared to fight this battle, or if we’ll be proactive and define the rules of engagement. Because if we don’t, the agents will simply bypass the gates we’ve spent decades building. It’s a clash between platform control and user autonomy.
Life is so tech. And the battle for who controls the digital transaction has just moved from the shop floor to the courtroom.
Mark Fancourt
