You can get out of the automated useless system. They don't make it easy.
But I once managed to get through to an actual agent with this question:
1. I want to buy a kindle version of this book [amazon link, for the paper version of the book].
2. On the page for the book, there is a link for the kindle edition: [link].
3. That link goes to a page for what appears to be an entirely different book. (Under the same name; this was an edition of the Arabian Nights.)
4. However, I have independently found this page: [link], which appears to be for the kindle version of the book I'm interested in.
5. Given that I want to buy the kindle version of the book linked up in step (1), which one should I purchase?
The agent directed me to buy the book that purported to be the book I wanted, instead of the book that Amazon believed was the book I wanted but which claimed to be something different. I would have assumed that anyway. But a couple days later I checked on the book and the "kindle version" link for the paper version had been corrected.
Unfortunately, while they did correct the issue on the one book that I took the time to point out to them, it's still rampant all over their website.
Actually this does sometimes work because some of the systems now have sentiment analysis baked in and can tell if the user is getting pissed off. I've used this a few times to get through as well.
Be careful, your voice could be used to train the next chat bots, and they could start yelling angrily at customers... actually, if the new chat bot is genuinely helpful, a screaming conversation would be kind of cathartic.
But I once managed to get through to an actual agent with this question:
1. I want to buy a kindle version of this book [amazon link, for the paper version of the book].
2. On the page for the book, there is a link for the kindle edition: [link].
3. That link goes to a page for what appears to be an entirely different book. (Under the same name; this was an edition of the Arabian Nights.)
4. However, I have independently found this page: [link], which appears to be for the kindle version of the book I'm interested in.
5. Given that I want to buy the kindle version of the book linked up in step (1), which one should I purchase?
The agent directed me to buy the book that purported to be the book I wanted, instead of the book that Amazon believed was the book I wanted but which claimed to be something different. I would have assumed that anyway. But a couple days later I checked on the book and the "kindle version" link for the paper version had been corrected.
Unfortunately, while they did correct the issue on the one book that I took the time to point out to them, it's still rampant all over their website.