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After using the ebay API recently, I was expecting it to be as simple to request info from Amazon, but it seems not...

There does not seem to be a good webpage which explains the basics. For starters, what is the service called? The old name has been dropped I think, and the acronym AWS used everywhere (but isn't that an umbrella term which includes their cloud computing and 20 other services too?).

There is a lack of clear information about the new 'signature' process. Gathering together snippets of detail from various pages I've stumbled upon, it seems that prior to August 2009 you just needed a developer account with Amazon to make requests and get XML back. Now you have to use some fancy encryption process to create an extra number in your querystring. Does this mean Amazon data is completely out of reach for the programmer who just wants a quick and simple solution?

There seems to be a tiny bit of information on RSS feeds, and you can get a feed of items that have been 'tagged' easily, but I can't tell if there is a way to search for titles using RSS too. Some websites seem to suggest this, but I think they are out of date now?

If anyone can give a short summary to the current state of play I'd be very grateful. All I want to do is go from a book title in my database, and use Classic ASP to get a set of products that match from Amazon, listing cover images and prices.

Amazon 'widgets' can display keyword search results on my pages, but I have less control over these, and they are shown to the user only - my code can't look inside them.

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    I've spent too much time fiddling with the Amazon Product API, many APIs really and PHP. All my code is available here.
    – Muskie
    Oct 5, 2011 at 7:28
  • I put PHP code into GitHub that fetches and demonstrates how to fetch various information from the Amazon Product API, somehow people noticed today. The original PHP code was written by Ulrich Mierendorff then modified by Sameer Borate and then extended by me. Sameer's explanation is here: codediesel.com/php/…
    – Muskie
    Jan 23, 2013 at 8:01
  • If you would like me to post a same mws pa code, I can do it when I get home. Aug 16, 2016 at 15:26

8 Answers 8

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Your post contains several questions, so I'll try to answer them one at a time:

  1. The API you're interested in is the Product Advertising API (PA). It allows you programmatic access to search and retrieve product information from Amazon's catalog. If you're having trouble finding information on the API, that's because the web service has undergone two name changes in recent history: it was also known as ECS and AAWS.
  2. The signature process you're referring to is the same HMAC signature that all of the other AWS services use for authentication. All that's required to sign your requests to the Product Advertising API is a function to compute a SHA-1 hash and and AWS developer key. For more information, see the section of the developer documentation on signing requests.
  3. As far as I know, there is no support for retrieving RSS feeds of products or tags through PA. If anyone has information suggesting otherwise, please correct me.
  4. Either the REST or SOAP APIs should make your use case very straight forward. Amazon provides a fairly basic "getting started" guide available here. As well, you can view the complete API developer documentation here.

Although the documentation is a little hard to find (likely due to all the name changes), the PA API is very well documented and rather elegant. With a modicum of elbow grease and some previous experience in calling out to web services, you shouldn't have any trouble getting the information you need from the API.

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    It's worth mentioning that the PA-API is now deprecated, and the Amazon Marketplace Web Service (MWS) should now be used: developer.amazonservices.com/index.html Apr 27, 2012 at 11:06
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    Dead link for the "getting started" guide referenced in #4 above.
    – jerhewet
    Jul 27, 2012 at 15:50
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    @Dan: this is incorrect, these are different purpose apis. Aug 16, 2015 at 5:46
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    I'm guessing you're right, as the API still exists! I wonder why I thought this... I'm sure I received an email saying this. Or maybe it was only deprecated for certain usages. Aug 17, 2015 at 9:21
  • Anyone has any Idea to get all product info for particular store only?
    – Sarveshwar
    Nov 15, 2019 at 4:30
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I agree that Amazon appears to be intentionally obfuscating even how to find the API documentation, as well as use it. I'm just speculating though.

Renaming the services from "ECS" to "Product Advertising API" was probably also not the best move, it essentially invalidated all that Google mojo they had built up over time.

It took me quite a while to 'discover' this updated link for the Product Advertising API. I don't remember being able to easily discover it through the typical 'Developer' link on the Amazon webpage. This documentation appears to valid and what I've worked from recently.

The change to authentication procedures also seems to add further complexity, but I'm sure they have a reason for it.

I use SOAP via C# to communicate with Amazon Product API.

With the REST API you have to encrypt the whole URL in a fairly specific way. The params have to be sorted, etc. There is just more to do. With the SOAP API, you just encrypt the operation+timestamp, and thats it.

Adam O'Neil's post here, How to get album, dvd, and blueray cover art from Amazon, walks through the SOAP with C# method. Its not the original sample I pulled down, and contrary to his comment, it was not an official Amazon sample I stumbled on, though the code looks identical. However, Adam does a good job at presenting all the necessary steps. I wish I could credit the original author.

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    It tells me I need an app or a website to register, but I want to register so I can access the API and build the app. Do I miss something here?!
    – K..
    Sep 25, 2017 at 17:33
  • What is google mojo ? The Adam O'Neil link at the end does not work anymore.
    – MasterJoe
    Aug 10, 2020 at 20:18
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I wrote a blog post on this subject, after spending hours wading through Amazon's obscure documentation. Maybe useful as another view on the process.

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  • Blog no longer exists
    – MattJ
    Oct 11, 2023 at 10:14
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    Fixed the link! Not sure how relevant it is now but keeping it around for historical value.
    – Skilldrick
    Oct 16, 2023 at 17:48
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I found a good alternative for requesting amazon product information here: http://api-doc.axesso.de/

Its an free rest api which return alle relevant information related to the requested product.

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Straight from the horse's moutyh: Summary of Product Advertising API Operations which has the following categories:

  • Find Items
  • Find Out More About Specific Items
  • Shopping Cart
  • Customer Content
  • Seller Information
  • Other Operations
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  • That horse too is now dead :(
    – Reg Edit
    Feb 27, 2022 at 21:19
  • I've added a new answer as of Feb 2022
    – Reg Edit
    Feb 27, 2022 at 21:33
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Since the time when the question was asked in 2009 the changes have, unsurprisingly, continued and some of the answers and links provided are now superseded or deadlinks.

As of February 2022, Amazon now provide the Product Advertising API Scratchpad for developers to try out API requests so they can get up and running in minutes:

Scratchpad is a tool to help Amazon Associates send basic requests to the Product Advertising API. Follow the steps below and you can have a working request with sample code in minutes.

The linked page also has onward links to pages where you may sign up for the Associate program and Product Advertising API and access the complete API documentation.

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    This does seem to be most up to date information. Worth noting, though, in order to use this... even the "Scratchpad" for developers... Amazon requires you to complete 3 "qualifying" sales before they will give you access to the API. This essentially requires you to enter into a business relationship with tax implications, etc. That's a pretty freaking large barrier entry to someone like me just doing research on a non-sales related topic. (I'm researching how to build SysML models programmatically through API calls... not interested in driving clicks to a blog or making sales on Amazon).
    – Trekkie
    Aug 3, 2022 at 21:06
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    Hit a wall when it required me to make "3 qualifying sales."
    – Trekkie
    Aug 3, 2022 at 21:07
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As mentioned by @Reg Edit in his recent answer, Amazon now provides a scratchpad for their Product Advertising API, which in-fact does have a "SearchItems" endpoint which presumably returns products for a search query similar to the one a shopper would enter into Amazon's search bar while shopping.

Here's a link explaining on how to get access to Amazon's Product Advertising API. This would be helpful for anyone looking to display Amazon product's on their application programmatically.

In order to get access to Amazon's Product Advertising API, you must meet the following 3 requirements:

  1. Have completed 3 sales in the last 180 days
  2. Have an approved associates account
  3. Comply with this agreement

Now if you don't meet the above requirements, the only other option Amazon gives you is to use their SiteStripe widget, which is a tool to help associates build links manually.

If you do not meet the requirements listed above and would still like to get Amazon product data for your app or website programmatically, you may use web scraping to achieve the same. Since the data is public, no one can legally stop you from scraping it. Depending on how experienced you are with programming, you could either build a scraper yourself or use a service that enables you to do so.

I have built one such service myself—it is called Amazon Product Search API and it allows users to grab search results from Amazon including product title, thumbnail, URL, etc. for any search query a user would make while shopping on Amazon. It supports all the major countries Amazon operates in.

Using this service does not require you to be an Amazon associate. Users may scrape up to 10k search results for free.

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