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Shaggar posted:are you saying you have to weigh every item not just the ones that are priced by weight? When supermarkets have the weight sensor in the bag area activated the whole process is really slow and finicky because you have to put each item on it and weight for it to (presumably) decide if the weight is within some sort of range of a programmed value, but it's very error prone. If you can just keep the items in the cart and scan it's much, much faster. mystes fucked around with this message at 18:26 on Jun 6, 2019 |
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# ? Jun 7, 2023 12:57 |
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I knew a girl in college who was all about shoplifting her rear end off. Came from means, didn't need to, still did it all the time. Loved those early self-checkout systems because it made it so much easier for her Run through a stack of 3 DVDs at the same time, scanner deactives the alarm thinger on all three but only scans one, inside weight tolerance for the bagging scale
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BangersInMyKnickers posted:I think they have a weight estimate for the item in a database somewhere linked to the upc, and they can probably calculate it dynamically from previous people scanning and bagging the same item this sounds like a solution that might actually work in the real world, so clearly nobody is doing anything like this
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i have no idea how the scale works yet, we're just getting our dev self-checkout koisk set up in the lab right now, but i guarantee it's doing the stupidest option possible because that's what all POS software does
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BangersInMyKnickers posted:I knew a girl in college who was all about shoplifting her rear end off. Came from means, didn't need to, still did it all the time. Loved those early self-checkout systems because it made it so much easier for her The dumbest was when I tried to use the scanner devices you can carry around with you in the supermarket in a Giant supermaket (same as Stop and Shop). I was biking to the store so I thought it would save time if I could just scan stuff and put it in my bag so I didn't have to rebag it when I got to the register. However, it seemed that as long as the store wasn't busy it would always make me have an employee check what i was buying for security. The amazing thing was that rather than having them look for expensive items or something, the way it worked was that they would grab the top three items from my bag to check if I had really scanned them. This pissed me off a lot because it would take like 10 minutes (mostly trying to get the attention of an employee) and there was no effort to see if *all* items had been scanned (even counting) so someone who wanted to shoplift could have just put expensive unscanned items at the bottom of their groceries. Why waste my time for something that's obviously not going to stop shoplifters?! Also, as I said it seemed to be based purely on how busy the store was so a shoplifter could have just gone at a busy time (I tended to go later in the evening when the store was quiet). Also even if it didn't make you have your groceries checked, there was some stupid part of the process you were supposed to scan a barcode by the register so the data could be transferred from the scanner to the register where if you did it in the wrong order it would just stop working and you would have to wait for someone to help you. Lol, I clearly care about self-checkout machines way too much.
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Shame Boy posted:one of the asks from one of our own executives was if we could figure out a way to either "fix" the scale component to not suck, or disable it altogether but still retain it's anti-theft effects the best self-checkouts in the city don't appear to use scales, they have cameras and a person still no "qty" button though, which sucks when you're buying like 30 of a hand-size something with a tiny stick-on barcode that doesn't scan half the time
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The home depot self-checkout scanners seem like they actually have some way to enter quantity but the interface is insane (there's no UI on the touchscreen and there are zillion unlabelled buttons on the scanner) so I couldn't figure it out the other day and I ended up entering the extremely long barcode for a bolt over and over again by hand (for some reason the barcode wasn't working either). It was actually really weird. Don't hardware stores sometimes have envelopes for you to put small hardware in so you can label it so you can be charged properly? At home depot I ended up taking a picture of the label/barcode when I grabbed the bolts on my smartphone because I literally couldn't figure out how else I would be able to pay for them. I would have just gone to a normal checkout aisle rather than self-checkout but they didn't seem to have any. I guess this is what it's like living in the future?
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Are you me? I was talking specifically about my home depot experience just yesterday, buying a few dozen angle brackets and other assorted parts. Felt weird beeping one in my hand and pitching another in the bag, but I was too annoyed to care and the person didn't say anything. Loose bits are so frustrating. You can't tell me the guy working at bulk barn can distinguish eleven unlabeled bags of white powder and type their SKUs in without even looking at the POS to verify he's got them right (because he knows), but a cashier at the end of the fasteners aisle is mystified by a 2" #8 wood screw. I renew my glowing praise for shoppers drug mart and the gift they've given us with these things (even if they are being kind of lovely to their existing staff about them) http://www.canadiangrocer.com/top-stories/shoppers-drug-mart-giving-self-checkouts-a-new-voice-75707
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BangersInMyKnickers posted:yeah, its a theft control mechanism so you don't run through a stack of the same item but only scan the bottom one or whatever. that's why it yells at you to put the item in your cart and stops you from scanning the next thing ive never had that happen with a self checkout. you just scan it and throw it in the bag area. the bag area has a sensor to detect that you put it there but if you're just sticking stuff in the bag after scanning its never a problem.
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mystes posted:Sorry, what I wrote was unclear. There are two different things: the scale by the scanner and a weight sensor in the bag area. yeah that thing, but its always off or set to not be so sensitive.
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mystes posted:The home depot self-checkout scanners seem like they actually have some way to enter quantity but the interface is insane (there's no UI on the touchscreen and there are zillion unlabelled buttons on the scanner) so I couldn't figure it out the other day and I ended up entering the extremely long barcode for a bolt over and over again by hand (for some reason the barcode wasn't working either). the ones here just got new ones here with gigantic touchscreen displays the size of a tv and a wireless scanning gun, they're p.good and you can do quantity scanning
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i thought y'all were talking about weighing things on the actual scanner/scale which would be terrible
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Shaggar posted:yeah that thing, but its always off or set to not be so sensitive. i assume they can adjust it on a per-store basis because i've been to some that are fine and like you describe, and i've been to some that are absurdly sensitive and get mad very easily if you don't carefully put the thing in the right place and make sure its full weight is resting on the sensor thing. now i get to be the person who decides that i guess ![]() mystes posted:I think a lot of this stuff is just annoying for normal users without actually stopping shoplifters. one of our customers a/b tested other stuff to stop shoplifters that's a lot less inconvenient, and the most effective was just shaming them. like if you have a picture of a person looking them in the eye on your app or checkout koisk or screen or whatever, people shoplift much less even though it's just a picture. Shame Boy fucked around with this message at 19:02 on Jun 6, 2019 |
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Shame Boy posted:one of our customers a/b tested other stuff to stop shoplifters that's a lot less inconvenient, and the most effective was just shaming them. like if you have a picture of a person looking them in the eye on your app or checkout koisk or screen or whatever, people shoplift much less even though it's just a picture.
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UNEXPECTED ITEM IN BAGGING AREA PLEASE WAIT FOR ASSISTANCE
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*BLEERPRPP* Your loyalty card cannot be scanned at this time. Please scan your card after you have scanned your last item. *clicks "pay now"* DO YOU HAVE A LOYALTY CARD do you have a urine-resistant motherboard?
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Shame Boy posted:there's a scale built in to the bagging area that automatically weighs every item as you pass it through. you have to wait for it to finish doing that before you can scan your next item, and if it gets the weight wrong or if your thing doesn't weigh what it expects it flags you and the attendant has to come over and override it, it's real dumb. supposedly it's there to prevent shoplifting but i'm really not sure how the gently caress it's supposed to do that. like are people going to put the stuff they're shoplifting on the scale area to weigh it? the best part of these scales is how on the self check lanes with a belt, anything lighter than a bottle of water either flat out doesn’t read or requires the most delicate touch for the scale component not to freak out.
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mystes posted:I honestly wouldn't mind having a person literally watching me over skype or something as long as I could actually get immediate assistance from them when needed. I was at Home Depot checking out at one of these self-service kiosks and the camera had a little display next to it. The display had the camera's feed and also the feed of a dude watching a screen full of cameras.
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Please place your bags in the bagging area. *places bag in bagging area* UNEXPECTED ITE
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ewiley posted:I was at Home Depot checking out at one of these self-service kiosks and the camera had a little display next to it. The display had the camera's feed and also the feed of a dude watching a screen full of cameras. Target just has a camera + screen attached to their self-checkouts at eye level pointed directly at you with a flashing red text of "RECORDING IN PROGRESS". It's loving dehumanizing and infuriating.
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Shaggar posted:it should be harder. its too easy for old people to use and they clog up the self checkout lanes. yes, that's how it works
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Volmarias posted:Target just has a camera + screen attached to their self-checkouts at eye level pointed directly at you with a flashing red text of "RECORDING IN PROGRESS". It's loving dehumanizing and infuriating. especially that "GAAAH! gently caress! do i actually look like that?" moment
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mystes posted:
fairway app just lets you use your phone to scan as you shop and then you don't need to be in the regular lines to finalize and pay. p dece
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fishmech posted:fairway app just lets you use your phone to scan as you shop and then you don't need to be in the regular lines to finalize and pay. p dece yeah a bunch of companies are moving towards that, we're integrating with one of those systems later on afaik. it's the same guys who did that a/b test, so now the app pops up a face on your screen to shame you into not shoplifting which is great
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fishmech posted:fairway app just lets you use your phone to scan as you shop and then you don't need to be in the regular lines to finalize and pay. p dece
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so im very curious how this is going to play out from applequote:Here's how the new system works, as Apple describes it, step by step: that sounds theoretically pretty cool and also potentially full of secfuck
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It also doesn't address the issue with getting anyone in a position of authority to reclaim your device to give a poo poo about it.
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A couple things seem interesting if it works that way: 1) As long as you have the private key, there's no way for apple to know whether the device belongs to you. Moreover, if I'm reading it correctly, apple never knows the identity of the device even after you've searched for it. This is good in terms of protecting your location data, but it also means this means that if you can somehow steal the private key from someone's phone you might be able to track them forever without anyone knowing, unless apple publishes a public list of every hash that's ever been searched for and phones periodically check it against the hashes they've generated to show a warning. 2) Actually forget tracking someone else's iphone. There's probably no way for apple do know whether the hashes are actually from apple devices, so it will be fun when you can get a tiny $1 bluetooth device from aliexpress that hijacks this system to allow you to track anything (cars, luggage, pets, people, you name it!)
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Shame Boy posted:i assume they can adjust it on a per-store basis because i've been to some that are fine and like you describe, and i've been to some that are absurdly sensitive and get mad very easily if you don't carefully put the thing in the right place and make sure its full weight is resting on the sensor thing. now i get to be the person who decides that i guess at my grocery store they have video screens showing a top down view of you at the self checkout with a red message like "CHECKOUT UNDER VIDEO SURVEILANCE" or something
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the find my feature probably works by generating a per-activation key and storing it in the Secure Enclave which is a one-way operation. then both of those issues become a question of device tamper resistance which is not necessarily a problem find my has to solve itself. similarly there is probably a vendor key or device key involved which is also not retrievable through software iOS autocorrect will capitalize Secure Enclave, lol
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Trabisnikof posted:so im very curious how this is going to play out from apple sounds like you could take the emitted public key and encrypt fake location data to send to apple unless they can somehow protect the client doing that work. wrt the rotating public key could you take the base private key that they all share and then do like a totp thing to generate a new private key based on time? if all devices generate the second key on the same schedule they should have the same secondary private key which can be used to generate the same public key. that public key could be used to encrypt the data and then when you go to find the device you just need to look back thru ur list of keys to find the matching one.
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Shaggar posted:wrt the rotating public key could you take the base private key that they all share and then do like a totp thing to generate a new private key based on time? if all devices generate the second key on the same schedule they should have the same secondary private key which can be used to generate the same public key. that public key could be used to encrypt the data and then when you go to find the device you just need to look back thru ur list of keys to find the matching one.
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“doesn't correlate with previous versions of the public key” is doing some confusing work in that piece
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Subjunctive posted:“doesn't correlate with previous versions of the public key” is doing some confusing work in that piece The whole point of this complicated approach seems to be that apple never knows the locations of any phones, even when you use the system to locate them.
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yeah i guess i wasn't sure if they were claiming apple invented some new thing that uses a modified version of the original material rather than generating an entirely new key.
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mystes posted:Doesn't that just mean you can't associate the same phone's public keys from different points in time if you don't have the corresponding private key? Otherwise apple would basically be tracking all phones all the time. yeah that's how i read it, im just not sure if they're doing it the easiest way (generating a second key based on original + time) or something else.
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mystes posted:Doesn't that just mean you can't associate the same phone's public keys from different points in time if you don't have the corresponding private key? Otherwise apple would basically be tracking all phones all the time. I have no idea what they intend “correlate” to be. neither can be computed from the other? they are not equal?
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# ? Jun 7, 2023 12:57 |
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Subjunctive posted:I have no idea what they intend “correlate” to be. neither can be computed from the other? they are not equal? It's pretty obvious what they're trying to say so I wouldn't worry too much about the exact meaning of "correlate." mystes fucked around with this message at 22:24 on Jun 6, 2019 |
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