• Rentlar
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    2 months ago

    A. Bug an employee even where this system is implemented.

    B. If I had no other choice than to use the app: Open the cabinet, take a dozen products, close the cabinet, “decide” against buying some and leave them on an adjacent shelf.

    (Edit) C: just “forget” to close the shelf. I’m not trained to handle their BS system.

  • @INeedMana@lemmy.world
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    392 months ago

    Access would require being logged into the CVS app and connected to the store’s Wi-Fi

    Wow. I had to check if the page is the onion

    • aramis87
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      132 months ago

      For this to work, you need to download and install the app, and sign up for CVS’ loyalty program. In the store, you need to be logged into the app and connected to the store’s Wi-Fi, and have Bluetooth turned on.

      • @njordomir@lemmy.world
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        32 months ago

        I’ve been looking into the local veggie co-op. You pay for the season and you can pick up a box of veggies once a week, all locally sourced. I’d go to the farmers market, but I’m worried it’ll just be a bunch of people selling marked up veggies they got from the grocery store.

        • dantheclammanOP
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          2 months ago

          Fortunately, at the farmers market, you can usually look up the farmer. Eg, visit once or twice just observing, seeing who gets visited by regulars, Google the farm name to look up details and reviews, etc

          • @njordomir@lemmy.world
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            22 months ago

            Will do. Cleaning up the sourcing of my food for both health and political reasons is a goal of mine for 2025. If I can grow it, trade it, or get it from a farmer locally, the supermarkets can take the loss.

            • @LH0ezVT@sh.itjust.works
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              22 months ago

              Unfortunately, farmers markets are rarely open in the evening. Actually that is a bit of a business opportunity…

  • @shikitohno@lemm.ee
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    262 months ago

    Or, just maybe, they could adequately staff their stores instead of constantly running skeleton crews. If they were actually sincere with their cries of high theft, more employees on the floor could deter would-be thieves, while also giving them time to help customers when needed and pack out product so the place doesn’t always look like an obstacle course left in the wake of a hurricane, with piles of stuff on the floor blocking half the aisles.

    Any place that requires an app for me to shop at is a hard no for me, much less all the other nonsense they want to include.

  • @howrar@lemmy.ca
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    182 months ago

    The poll in the article…

    Would you use an app to unlock retail store displays?

    • Yes. If it speeds up shopping, that’s a win for me.

    • No. I don’t need an app to shop, and will just find and employee to unlock it.

    Where’s the option of “no, I didn’t need it as much as I thought I did”

    • Quokka
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      22 months ago

      @howrar @dantheclamman I needed a replacement garage door remote last week. Bunnings has them locked to the shelf thing. I did bend it a fair amount but couldn’t get the thing off. Found an employee who seemed as pissed off as I was. He didn’t have a key though. So had to disappear for quite some time to find one. It’s a $60 product in a reasonable size pack. Not a $6000 item I can slip in my pocket. Another reason to shop online (I needed that item that day otherwise I would have got it online)

  • @CaptDust@sh.itjust.works
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    152 months ago

    If everyone has a key, what’s the point of locking the products? Maybe next they’ll have public mag keys available at the entrance?

    • shoulderoforion
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      232 months ago

      The point is they know from your app login who opened which case when, so if shit goes missing, they’ll know who stole it. That’s the point.

      • walden
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        142 months ago

        There’s no timestamp for when things go missing, though.

        • @CaptDust@sh.itjust.works
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          122 months ago

          I guess if they discover shrink, they’ll have a log of when it was accessed, and could cross reference camera footage, then track down the account and blacklist it or prosecute… no loss prevention is going to do all this lol.

        • shoulderoforion
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          52 months ago

          there are regular inventories, and most likely smart cases with time recording on tap (most even low digit inventory is rfid chipped these days, so even if it doesn’t set off an alarm when taken out of the store, that shit is being recorded when it triggers)

      • @CaptDust@sh.itjust.works
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        92 months ago

        Genuine question, do I need to show an ID to make a CVS account? Use a real name? How could they reliably link the digital account to a person?

        • shoulderoforion
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          72 months ago

          yeah i dunno the ins and outs of that, but the app most likely reports on your devices iemi, so regardless of what throwaway email address you use to sign up, if you bought that device, the cell company has your deets, also if they’re making you connect to the cvs wifi, then their router will have that devices MAC address, and most like grab it’s iemi information as well

  • @rumba@lemmy.zip
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    112 months ago

    Why the fuck aren’t they just dropping this shit off at my door?

    Why do I need to go into a convenience store when there’s no convenience?