with mobile telephones hanging from it,
birds did not put them there, and it is not a new work of art, photograph Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg, Amazon
contract delivery drivers in Chicago, Illinois, and other areas, are allegedly
hanging their smartphones outside warehouses and delivery points to boost their
chances of getting delivery orders, the drivers hang their smartphones in trees
close to the companies’ warehouses and parking their cars nearby to get first
dibs on accepting new delivery orders. Amazon’s system allegedly chooses
drivers based on who is closest to the pickup location, so even the slightest advantage
over the stiff competition among drivers can boost chances of getting access to
the offers first. The phones in the trees have the Amazon Flex app installed
and are synched with other phones belonging to other drivers, to make it harder
for Amazon to detect offenders, “The phones in trees seem to serve as master
devices that dispatch routes to multiple nearby drivers in on the plot,
according to drivers who have observed the process,” Bloomberg writes,
“They
believe an unidentified person or entity is acting as an intermediary between
Amazon and the drivers and charging drivers to secure more routes, which is
against Amazon’s policies. The perpetrators likely dangle multiple phones in
the trees to spread the work around to multiple Amazon Flex accounts and avoid
detection by Amazon” allegedly a driver
who had observed the phones hanging in trees outside various Amazon and Whole
Foods locations in Chicago said the retail giant knows about the practice “but
does nothing” about it. However, an Amazon spokesperson told Business Insider that the Bloomberg story is
inaccurate and that the alleged cheating tactic is not very effective, in an urban
area with good coverage, Amazon’s system can detect a smartphone’s location to
within about 20 feet, that means
a phone in a tree outside Whole Foods’ door would get the delivery offer even
before drivers sitting in their cars a block away, “This story
isn’t an accurate description of how they work, and waiting in the parking lot
or using the store Wi-Fi is not an effective way to increase one’s chances of
seeing an instant offer,” the spokesperson said, an internal
email obtained by Bloomberg allegedly showed that Amazon had been notified of
the practice by other drivers, but while it promised to investigate, the
company said it wouldn’t be able to share the results of that investigation, so if you live near a distribution center look out for mobile phones in trees, this of course is happening in the USA, but I guess it is only a matter of time before we see the same in the UK, my gran often used to tease me about money growing on trees, but now it is mobile phones!
No comments:
Post a Comment