• Underwaterbob@sh.itjust.works
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    11 minutes ago

    They already do this in Korea. I don’t know if they are actually changing prices moment-to-moment, but they are using e-ink price tags that are impossible to distinguish from their printed, paper brethren. I saw one glitch out one day, and that was the only way I could tell. I mean, I guess I might be able to tell if I hunched down and inspected one closely, but it seriously looked identical to the same old printed ones at a glance.

  • donkeystomple@lemmy.ml
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    52 minutes ago

    Time to vote with our wallets. I absolutely will refuse to shop at any store in my area that starts implementing this.

  • timestatic@feddit.org
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    2 hours ago

    They already do that, just not as frequently. They change price tags of items every day by hand

  • BenchpressMuyDebil@szmer.info
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    3 hours ago

    In Poland it’s already there in stores owned by the German Schwarz-Gruppe - Lidl and Kaufland. One might want to start shopping local to get exposed to 100% free range organic greed instead of lab-optimized greed at big stores.

  • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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    4 hours ago

    A problem area is pricing that changes 10 minutes after you put it in basket but before checkout. Though OP did go through some other abuse scenarios, though some were far fetched. This can’t allow a store to personalize prices the way a web site can.

    • 🌞 Alexander Daychilde 🌞@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      This is what I came to the comments to gripe about this whole thing. Yes, they can play some games and probably will, but consider: People will be watching. They do this and you bet people will track this crap and post about it. The blowback will be huge.

      If they’re stupid enough to try this, it will not last. lol. You can raise prices over the long term, but fuck around with short term prices people can see changing for no good reason? Yeah…

      And on the “personal pricing” - that’s written by someone that doesn’t understand how barcodes work.

      But I’m sure they will try to play some games with it.

  • BurntWits@sh.itjust.works
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    3 hours ago

    My grocery store has had these for a while. Dynamic price reductions are coming too. Instead of a set % off, it’ll calculate the most optimal percentage to take off based on popularity of the product, how long until expiry, etc. Just a heads up.

    • TellusChaosovich@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      Thank you for telling the useful side of what this could be like. I’m on a sales team who considers options like dynamic pricing, and it is nice to know what good vs bad to look out for.

  • Art3mis@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Looks like e-ink. A thumb tack taped to your thumb should take care of these pretty quick and inconspicuously. Especially if people generally agree this is stupid and should be shunned.

      • CaptPretentious@lemmy.world
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        28 minutes ago

        High traffic area, common product that sees a lot of people. You could get 2-3 in a trip without much worry. Do it every few visits. Get a few additional people to do it with the same plan. If you notice more security, just move on, force them to give up or water a bunch of money. Leave reviews of the store how you don’t like the extra security/cameras. Your a customer not a criminal! Call out the management…

        You don’t have to win in a day, but an expensive, annoying, psychological warfare approach… That and going after them on social media.

  • Zephorah@discuss.online
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    6 hours ago

    I’m still not clear on exactly what triggers this. Is it phone location, because a phone number is linked to all your data (unless you’ve been gaming it for the last 5-10yrs)? Do I walk by with my phone and the price goes up?

    Is it like goodwill? Does the price change as you’re checking out? Do I grab a 2lb bag of medium roast coffee beans for $13, and because buying it consistently for decades, it’s now $18 at checkout? But is still $13 for the guy behind me who decided to try whole bean over pre-ground?

    If rich people turn off their phones before hitting the parking lot and poor people leave theirs on, does the entire store get cheaper?

    If you take a pic with your phone of the “advertised” price does that mitigate sudden increases while checking out, if you’re even watching?

    Does having your unemployed, deadbeat uncle or kid do the shopping from their phone make it cheaper for the household?

    What are the triggers?

    • OfCourseNot@fedia.io
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      6 hours ago

      We’ve had them for quite some time. They don’t change price for individual customers, I don’t think they change the price in the middle of the day either. But, I guess, they can change the prices just before opening, like if the wether service forecasts a rainy day they could rise the price of umbrellas and raincoats. Cold? Hot chocolate and soups. Hot? Ice cream and cold drinks. Certain asshole died overnight? Champaign and confetti cannons through the roof. And so on…

      • hitmyspot@aussie.zone
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        4 hours ago

        They don’t currently, but they could.

        Take brand x on the shelf. Sold for $5 at a profit of $1. They sell 10 per week. You buy 2 if those every week, on Wednesday at about 6pm. Why not make them $5.50 next Wednesday and see what happens. Normal price on other days as no pattern identified.

        Then once that’s successful, why not have beacons detecting your phone, or even the stores app feeding your location. Then they can update just for the hours you are there.

        Oh, but you’ll say you swore it said $5 when you picked it off the shelf. The worker will say they have to charge what’s there now and what it scanned as. Your choice to purchase it or go look for something else.

        They’ve already started all this crap with online purchasing. It’s just moving it to retail.

        • Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Surge pricing really only works when you put the customer in isolation. Uber can do it because you’re the only one seeing the rate for the trip you want to take. Amazon can do it because you’re shopping while taking a shit at work. Nobody else sees the prices in your online shopping cart, that’s not the case in retail.

          The profit motive behind these tags is wage savings. It saves in the time it takes to change out price tags when the prices do change. It saves in the time used in finding and replacing missing or damaged tags. It saves in the amount of manual price corrections at the till when the tag doesn’t match the till because the tag wasn’t updated - or the lost time and revenue if someone abandons their cart because of said disagreement.

          Could they do what you’re saying? Technologically speaking, it’s been possible for several years - we’ve had these tags on most major store shelves in Canada for a very long time now and apps tracking our every move. Why hasn’t it happened already? These stores have had everything they need to implement this scheme, and of all the shady cunts in this world, Galen Weston would have by now if it could have turned a profit.

          It’s easier to just price-fix the bread and pay a fraction of your profit in lawsuit settlements decades later than to do what you’re describing.

          • hitmyspot@aussie.zone
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            2 hours ago

            I a shop with 10 products, yes, I’d agree. In a supermarket with thousands of products, they can predict what you’re likely to buy if you’re a regular customer and you might be the only one buying those items that day.

            I don’t expect them to do it overnight. First they roll them out for the cost savings. Just like they did with barcodes rather than price labels. Then they start to look at other savings or profit centres.

            After a while it becomes, why wouldn’t they do it?

            • Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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              1 hour ago

              Why go through the trouble of gaslighting someone with digital price tags somehow changing the price on the fly based on whoever happens to be looking at it (BTW, what happens if two people with different price profiles are looking at the tag at the same time?), when they could just remove the tags entirely or even more likely, just close the store and force you to shop online where they can do all the usual online price fuckery?

              • hitmyspot@aussie.zone
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                1 hour ago

                Some countries require pricing to be visible. I would assume, just like online, they will use algorithms and ai to figure out what price point gives the most profit. Its only trouble to set up. The corporate world doesn’t look at trouble. They look at cost. If the return investment is positive, they do it. If it’s high, they do it as a priority.

                Not all retail is online. Much is but not all. Groceries is one that is often better in person for that evenings meal on the way home from work. It’s led to the rise of metro style supermarkets near transport hubs.

                • Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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                  53 minutes ago

                  Grocery is already going online, look at all the companies sponsoring youtube vids. The margins for what you’re describing are, at the absolute best, razor-thin.

                  E-tags draw significantly more profit from things like one-day (loss leader) flash sales, or in-store specials, or other conventional retail pricing tactics.

                  Take a 4-hour sale on some popular product, put an ad up on Instagram to get people in your store on the way home from work and you make a mint. You don’t need E-tags to do that, but it means that you don’t have to pay someone to change out the paper tags on that product twice in their shift.

                  You’re getting distracted by the least likely way they’ll fuck you over, when they’re just sticking to tried-and-true collusion.

    • chaogomu@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      That’s the personalized prices. That’s step two.

      This one is the digital price tags that let the store manager or corporate office instantly raise prices throughout the store for everyone.

    • gex@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      I can imagine price stickers would update daily, and individual users would get personalized discounts on their app.

      App-less buyers would pay the baseline price in the sticker, app users would pay less. Like existing loyalty card programs, but with more data collection

    • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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      7 hours ago

      Reminder that by law, if the price is listed wrong:

      Sometimes the price of an item in store or online at the checkout may not match the displayed or advertised price in store or online. If this happens, even by mistake, the business must either:

      • sell the product for the lowest price - either the checkout price, or displayed or advertised price, or
      • stop selling the item until the incorrect price is corrected.
        • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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          6 hours ago

          Australia, the country the article is talking about. That was a quote from the ACCC website.

        • T00l_shed@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          The closest thing I can think of would be Quebec, they have some fairly strong consumer protections, but i don’t know how far they would extend in cases like this

      • MimicJar@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        stop selling the item until the incorrect price is corrected

        Not a lawyer but couldn’t they just refuse to sell it to you? We all know it would be bullshit but couldn’t a company say “Oh that minimum wage clerk made a mistake, but don’t blame them, just an honest mistake.”

        Or is the law, if it’s on the shelf, it must be honored?

        • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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          6 hours ago

          They would have to refuse to sell to anyone. It would likely not be lawful to leave it on the shelf and sell it at the higher price to someone else who might not have noticed the discrepancy, until they fix up the shelf pricing.

  • I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    I’ve gotta wonder… How expensive are these little networked e-ink displays? Probably not super expensive, but they’ve gotta be more than a paper price tag. Definitely more of a hassle to replace when someone breaks them by running into them, accidentally snapping them off, etc…

    • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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      31 minutes ago

      $8 (I’m assuming Dollarydoos). At least according to the article (it’s hidden in the caption of a photo). And it cites Reddit…

    • Giloron@programming.dev
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      4 hours ago

      But more expensive than the wage of the person to go around replacing them for weekly sales? Walking back and forth to make a new tag to fill in an empty spot when something runs out?

  • its_kim_love@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    8 hours ago

    If my local store switches to digital price tags to do this I’m just going to gather as many as I can and flush them down the toilet.

  • Babalugats@feddit.uk
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    8 hours ago

    Boycott the stores that use them, it might help them change their mind behind they become the norm.

    • Geobloke@aussie.zone
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      4 hours ago

      This is Australia and I think 90% of grocery shops are either this one or the competitor