It is not legal to charge a different price at the register. Also, it would be quite difficult to ensure the price you pay at the register matches the price you saw on the shelf ten minutes ago.
If you suspect they are changing prices on you from the time you leave the shelf, take a photo of the price. If it’s different at the register, you know it was changed.
It would be really hard to guarantee it. There are definitely times it has taken more than an hour to go around the store. It takes at least 45 mins on a normal trip, and the more kids that are with me the longer it takes. You need a lot of groceries when you’re eating for 5.
It’s not that granular. They’re going to use surge pricing, so when you shop is going to matter a lot. The tag will match the till. Going to buy beer and hot dogs on game day? Surge pricing!
Why? I can match the till and tag automatically and slip in a 30 minute grace period between. The number of customers who would be impacted would likely be marginal.
It definitely takes me longer than 30 mins to get through the store.
But the “why” is that I think a single customer being overcharged by this system is too many. I know it happens a lot by accident at the moment because staff screw up the paper price tags, but having it by design is no longer an honest mistake.
And worse, the answer to this problem is probably going to be “facial recognition” and I hate that even more.
How is it legal for a price to be different between when you read the price on the shelf and when they charge you?
It is not legal to charge a different price at the register. Also, it would be quite difficult to ensure the price you pay at the register matches the price you saw on the shelf ten minutes ago.
If you suspect they are changing prices on you from the time you leave the shelf, take a photo of the price. If it’s different at the register, you know it was changed.
Yeah, no. Ban the tags. Thank you.
Will it be? It seems pretty easy to choose a transition time ( say an hour even ) and to charge the lowest price in the last 60 minutes.
Does it take more than an hour between pulling something off the shelf and hitting the register?
Anyway, I totally hate it so this is not me defending it.
It would be really hard to guarantee it. There are definitely times it has taken more than an hour to go around the store. It takes at least 45 mins on a normal trip, and the more kids that are with me the longer it takes. You need a lot of groceries when you’re eating for 5.
It’s not that granular. They’re going to use surge pricing, so when you shop is going to matter a lot. The tag will match the till. Going to buy beer and hot dogs on game day? Surge pricing!
I can only see it working when the prices are changed for a full day, after the store is closed/before they open.
I can see how it would be feasible to change each day. I still hate it though.
Why? I can match the till and tag automatically and slip in a 30 minute grace period between. The number of customers who would be impacted would likely be marginal.
It definitely takes me longer than 30 mins to get through the store.
But the “why” is that I think a single customer being overcharged by this system is too many. I know it happens a lot by accident at the moment because staff screw up the paper price tags, but having it by design is no longer an honest mistake.
And worse, the answer to this problem is probably going to be “facial recognition” and I hate that even more.
These bitches appear to be starving, activate surge pricing, they won’t say no!!!