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posted by martyb on Sunday September 24 2017, @01:23PM   Printer-friendly
from the is-your-fridge-"clean"? dept.

Walmart wants to test "in-fridge delivery" for Silicon Valley customers with August Home "smart locks":

Here's how the test will work: I place an order on Walmart.com for several items, even groceries. When my order is ready, a Deliv driver will retrieve my items and bring them to my home. If no one answers the doorbell, he or she will have a one-time passcode that I've pre-authorized which will open my home's smart lock. As the homeowner, I'm in control of the experience the entire time – the moment the Deliv driver rings my doorbell, I receive a smartphone notification that the delivery is occurring and, if I choose, I can watch the delivery take place in real-time. The Deliv associate will drop off my packages in my foyer and then carry my groceries to the kitchen, unload them in my fridge and leave. I'm watching the entire process from start to finish from my home security cameras through the August app. As I watch the Deliv associate exit my front door, I even receive confirmation that my door has automatically been locked.

While some may find the idea creepy, others have downplayed the creepiness factor:

"Five years ago consumers wouldn't have assumed they'd let a stranger drive them from the airport, much less stay in their house," said Forrest Collier, the CEO of eMeals, a platform that offers shopping lists based on recipes and loads the items into online shopping carts at Walmart and Kroger (KR) . "Now both Uber and Airbnb are billion-dollar companies."

For now, the fridge restocking service will only be available to Silicon Valley users of August Home. Customers will get a notification through their August Home app every time a delivery person drops off their food.

[...] Even though this Walmart service sounds "creepy on the front end," said Collier of eMeals, "it's really not as creepy as letting a stranger sleep in your bedroom."

Also at LA Times, Reuters, SiliconBeat, and CNET.


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  • (Score: 2) by jcross on Sunday September 24 2017, @06:11PM (2 children)

    by jcross (4009) on Sunday September 24 2017, @06:11PM (#572391)

    In this case the potential thief would be an employee of the delivery company, with their every action monitored. They could be fired and/or prosecuted if a customer shows video evidence of them stealing, so my guess is they'd go out of their way to not even look like they're doing something suspicious. It's a completely different situation from a thief who randomly enters your house.

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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by Phoenix666 on Sunday September 24 2017, @07:42PM (1 child)

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Sunday September 24 2017, @07:42PM (#572424) Journal

    The likelier scenario would be the Walmart employee cases the joint for his pals to knock over. He takes his cut, buries it in the back yard. Wash, rinse, repeat.

    --
    Washington DC delenda est.
    • (Score: 2) by jcross on Sunday September 24 2017, @09:36PM

      by jcross (4009) on Sunday September 24 2017, @09:36PM (#572461)

      Fucking genius!