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Online shopping is full of copycats

On The Vergecast: how online shopping became boring in an era of unmitigated mass consumption. Plus, what a small nonprofit is doing to save and recycle textile waste.

On The Vergecast: how online shopping became boring in an era of unmitigated mass consumption. Plus, what a small nonprofit is doing to save and recycle textile waste.

Mia Sato
is features writer with five years of experience covering the companies that shape technology and the people who use their tools.

Let’s be real: the internet is full of a lot of the same stuff. From derivative content on social media to websites that all look the same, what was once a portal to new worlds and experiences has been feeling a bit dry recently, like I’ve seen all this stuff before. And now, even the products being sold to us — clothing, home decor, gadgets, and more — are looking eerily similar to one another.

This week on The Vergecast, guest host Mia Sato talks to YouTube fitness pioneer Cassey Ho (better known as Blogilates) about the well-oiled machine that is the dupe economy. Ho shares her experience creating her own line of athletic wear that sooner or later gets ripped off by countless copycats — and how she tries to fight back.

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Then, Mia brings an audio diary from a visit to Fabscrap, a textile recycling facility in New York that is working to save fabric and other materials from landfills. Fashion is a wasteful industry, not unlike tech — but luckily, there are people like the Fabscrap staff and volunteers who are working toward solutions.

Finally, Verge staffer Victoria Song swings by to help answer a hotline question about how to make the high-tech Clueless closet a reality. If you have a question for us, call 866-VERGE11 or email vergecast@theverge.com.

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