The CustomerFull response group provides all of the content created by a customer. CustomerFull is a parent response group that contains the CustomerInfo, CustomerLists, and CustomerReviews response groups. Additionally, CustomerFull returns the About Me message that appears on each Amazon customer's member page on Amazon, as well as the customer's birthday, if this information is public on Amazon.
Sample Response (REST)
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<CustomerContentLookupResponse xmlns="http://webservices.amazon.com/AWSECommerceService/2005-10-05">
<OperationRequest>
<HTTPHeaders>
<Header Name="UserAgent" Value="Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1)"/>
</HTTPHeaders>
<RequestId>1AH6FM4A4PEHNAECJ7F1</RequestId>
<Arguments>
<Argument Name="Service" Value="AWSECommerceService"/>
<Argument Name="AssociateTag" Value="[Your Associate ID Here]"/>
<Argument Name="CustomerId" Value="A2KEKKJ9CAC2KC"/>
<Argument Name="AWSAccessKeyId" Value="[Your Access Key ID Here]"/>
<Argument Name="ResponseGroup" Value="CustomerFull"/>
<Argument Name="Operation" Value="CustomerContentLookup"/>
</Arguments>
</OperationRequest>
<Customers>
<Request>
<IsValid>True</IsValid>
</Request>
<Customer>
<Nickname>jeff</Nickname>
<WishListId>BUWBWH9K2H77</WishListId>
<Reviews>
<Review>
<ASIN>B0000VUP40</ASIN>
<Rating>5</Rating>
<HelpfulVotes>7</HelpfulVotes>
<TotalVotes>8</TotalVotes>
<Date>2000-08-29</Date>
<Summary>Ridiculously Good Cookies</Summary>
<Content>This is an assortment of carefully wrapped cookies. They claim to ship only hours after the baking is done, and the taste would certainly indicate that that's true. I'm not exactly sure how many different cookie types there are in the box since I (and my co-workers) started eating before I started counting. But somewhere around eight or more different types. The snickerdoodles were the best I've ever had. Ridiculously good cookies.</Content>
</Review>
<Review>
<ASIN>B0000TM9KA</ASIN>
<Rating>5</Rating>
<HelpfulVotes>11</HelpfulVotes>
<TotalVotes>11</TotalVotes>
<Date>1999-12-23</Date>
<Summary>My mouth is watering as I write this</Summary>
<Content>If you're doing a low-carb diet or looking for snack foods that won't trigger a glycemic reaction, try these amazing cheese snacks. They are very delicate and pastry-like, crumbling in your mouth. Very savory -- no sweetness. Aunt Lizzie is on to something, and these are a no-compromise low-carb snack.</Content>
</Review>
<Review>
<ASIN>0765304368</ASIN>
<Rating>5</Rating>
<HelpfulVotes>22</HelpfulVotes>
<TotalVotes>25</TotalVotes>
<Date>2000-04-07</Date>
<Summary>A grand idea novel!</Summary>
<Content>
<P>Dr. Gillian Taylor: Don't tell me you don't use money in the 23rd Century.</P>
<P>Kirk: Well we don't.</P>
<P> -- Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home </P>
<P>Star Trek may be a money-free universe, but they've always left blank the details of how scarce assets like a starship or a Picasso ... or the Haunted Mansion might get allocated.</P>
<P>In this fun, fast book, the clearly talented Cory Doctorow explores a full-on reputation economy. With the help of a sophisticated, real-time network, people accumulate and lose a reputation currency called "whuffie." The ideas are an incredibly rich playground, and the author doesn't make you suffer through flat characters or clunky prose to get to them. On the contrary, these are totally alive characters set in a deeply conjured world (which world is Disney World, a place you can feel the author's passion for). By the end, you'll know the characters well enough to be able to judge what impact this new world has -- or doesn't have -- on the fundamentals of human nature.</P>
<P>Cory Doctorow deserves much whuffie for this novel. Highly recommended.</P>
</Content>
</Review>
<Review>
<ASIN>0805059857</ASIN>
<Rating>5</Rating>
<HelpfulVotes>32</HelpfulVotes>
<TotalVotes>33</TotalVotes>
<Date>2000-05-02</Date>
<Summary>They were planning to tour the Solar System</Summary>
<Content>For those of us who dream of visiting the outer planets, seeing Saturn's rings up close without intermediation of telescopes or charge-coupled devices, well, we pretty much *have* to read "Project Orion." In 1958, some of the world's smartest people, including famous physicist Freeman Dyson (the author's father), expected to visit the outer planets in "Orion," a nuclear-bomb propelled ship big enough and powerful enough to seat its passengers in lazy-boy recliners. They expected to start their grand tour by 1970. This was not pie-in-the-sky optimism; they had strong technical reasons for believing they could do it.<P>To pull this book together, George Dyson did an astonishing amount of research into this still largely classified project. And, maybe because he's connected to Orion through his father, the author captures the strong emotion of the project and the team. Highly recommended.</P>
</Content>
</Review>
<Review>
<ASIN>0316499552</ASIN>
<Rating>5</Rating>
<HelpfulVotes>30</HelpfulVotes>
<TotalVotes>74</TotalVotes>
<Date>2000-07-17</Date>
<Summary>Intense and disciplined</Summary>
<Content>This book is about people -- an incredibly interesting assortment of determined, competitive people thrust into a circumstance more challenging and dangerous than any of them expected. Bruce Knecht captures acts of heroism and frailty, but, in a display of astonishing writerly discipline, he never judges these people. Judging these strong people would inevitably over-simplify the reality of human behavior under life-threatening stress. The way Knecht does it, as we read, we get to wonder how we would react.</Content>
</Review>
<Review>
<ASIN>B00004THDE</ASIN>
<Rating>5</Rating>
<HelpfulVotes>74</HelpfulVotes>
<TotalVotes>80</TotalVotes>
<Date>2000-07-24</Date>
<Summary>Absolutely the best binoculars I've used</Summary>
<Content>The problem with high power binoculars is that humans can't hold them steady, and that jitter makes it impossible to really look at something without a tripod. The image stabilization in this pair solves that problem and holds things rock steady. This is an expensive product that clearly distingues itself, and one of those products that technology makes seem a little magic. <P> I have only two small complaints: First, for a product this expensive they should pre-install the neck strap for you -- not a big deal, but it would be nice for the customer. Second, I wish the lens cap covers were higher quality and attachable to the unit so they wouldn't get lost. Again, not a big deal. </P>
<P> These are without a doubt the best binoculars I've ever used.</P>
</Content>
</Review>
<Review>
<ASIN>B00001U0DP</ASIN>
<Rating>5</Rating>
<HelpfulVotes>11</HelpfulVotes>
<TotalVotes>12</TotalVotes>
<Date>2000-07-28</Date>
<Summary>Wow. A masterpiece.</Summary>
<Content>This movie is absolutely all it's cracked up to be. Hysterically funny and simultaneously a tear jerker -- it's ultimately very uplifting. The cinematography is also fantastic -- amazing use of color. <P> The DVD has dubbed english as an option, but I strongly recommend going with the subtitles instead so you can hear Benigni's amazing acting and passion. </P>
<P> Too bad the DVD doesn't include any deleted scenes. With Benigni, I think it would be particularly fun to see out-takes.</P>
<P/>
<P>Absolutely a great movie!</P>
</Content>
</Review>
<Review>
<ASIN>6305692688</ASIN>
<Rating>1</Rating>
<HelpfulVotes>20</HelpfulVotes>
<TotalVotes>34</TotalVotes>
<Date>2000-08-23</Date>
<Summary>one star is indeed one too many</Summary>
<Content>Let's face facts. This is a terrible, terrible movie. We have to guess that all involved in this project are hiding. Really, I'm generally quite easy on movies, but this endless stream of uninteresting battle scenes with pointless dialogue and no discernable plot is perhaps one of the worst movies ever made. Sorry if this seems harsh, but I just don't want anyone to buy it unknowingly.</Content>
</Review>
</Reviews>
</Customer>
</Customers>
</CustomerContentLookupResponse>
The Request that Generated the Response (REST)
http://webservices.amazon.com/onca/xml?Service=AWSECommerceService
&AWSAccessKeyId=[Your Access Key ID Here]
&AssociateTag=[Your Associate ID Here]
&Operation=CustomerContentLookup
&CustomerId=A2KEKKJ9CAC2KC
&ResponseGroup=CustomerFull