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Comment Re:now that everyone knows (Score 1) 236

Not tru! I hav buddies from Walmart n Target & the trucking companies. What we do is we hav fake robberies, take entire inventory n resell on craigslist. U can do the same for Amazon packages. It's all about being smart, n not being a retard. The police ask questions n shit, you say idk bro. It helps if u got friends in the department too, but my city too big fro that. There lots of ways to make money on side

Comment Re:If everyone stole (Score 0) 236

The shit is there for the taking. I kno sum ppl that work in the electronics section of Walmart n Target. They kno how to just take the beats without security noticing. Why beats? cause they arnt tracked in the inventory tracking, they never kno how much they got in stock, so they nvr notice if u steal. Wit ps4 or tv you get fuckt, beats u dont. You resell beats on craigslist, haf price, 100% profit. It's all about sustainable theft n makin a buisness. Be smart, don't be a retard.

Comment If everyone stole (Score -1, Flamebait) 236

Amazon can't do shit about it, cause no one has reason to give a shit about Amazon. I support this kind of thing, and think everyone should steal shit. I steal shit from Walmart and Target all the time, everyone should. It's only illegal if you get caught.

Submission + - Amazon Plants Fake Packages In Delivery Trucks As Part of Undercover Ploy (businessinsider.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Amazon uses fake packages to catch delivery drivers who are stealing, according to sources with knowledge of the practice. The company plants the packages — internally referred to as "dummy" packages — in the trucks of drivers at random. The dummy packages have fake labels and are often empty.

Here's how the practice works, according to the sources: During deliveries, drivers scan the labels of every package they deliver. When they scan a fake label on a dummy package, an error message will pop up. When this happens, drivers might call their supervisors to address the problem, or keep the package in their truck and return it to an Amazon warehouse at the end of their shift. Drivers, in theory, could also choose to steal the package. The error message means the package isn't detected in Amazon's system. As a result, it could go unnoticed if the package were to go missing. "If you bring the package back, you are innocent. If you don't, you're a thug," said Sid Shah, a former manager for DeliverOL, a courier company that delivers packages for Amazon.

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