David777
Well-known Member
- Location
- Silicon Valley
A new study on retail self-checkout stations, shows a reflection of sad ethical attitudes for many people today. Younger generations were far more likely to rationalize away doing so than older people. The same cheating attitude exists at many schools where youth learn ways to cheat whenever they can do so to get ahead that then orients that rationalization attitude and behavior as an option more generally as adults.
It obviously results in an acceptable attitude within some communities. Of course, that means we cannot trust people in many ways I grew up with. My expectation is stealing and cheating is too well entrenched with many persons for self checkout as now deployed, so that social experiment is likely to end. I personally am fine with using it but also realize how easy it is to abuse.
More than 1 in 4 self-checkout shoppers admit they’ve stolen: Survey
(NewsNation) — Self-checkout may save time at the store, but a growing number of shoppers admit they’ve also used it to steal.
Among Americans who’ve used self-checkout, 27 percent say they’ve intentionally taken an item without scanning it — up from 15 percent in 2023, according to a recent LendingTree survey.
Millennials (41 percent) and Gen Z adults (37 percent) were the most likely to admit to stealing at self-checkout, while only 2 percent of Baby Boomers said the same. Men (38 percent) were more than twice as likely as women (16 percent) to say they’ve done it...
Interestingly, those with household incomes of $100,000 or more were the most likely (40 percent) to say they’ve intentionally taken an item without scanning it. Just 17 percent of those making less than $30,000 said the same.
Stores rethink how widely they use self-checkout...
It obviously results in an acceptable attitude within some communities. Of course, that means we cannot trust people in many ways I grew up with. My expectation is stealing and cheating is too well entrenched with many persons for self checkout as now deployed, so that social experiment is likely to end. I personally am fine with using it but also realize how easy it is to abuse.
More than 1 in 4 self-checkout shoppers admit they’ve stolen: Survey
(NewsNation) — Self-checkout may save time at the store, but a growing number of shoppers admit they’ve also used it to steal.
Among Americans who’ve used self-checkout, 27 percent say they’ve intentionally taken an item without scanning it — up from 15 percent in 2023, according to a recent LendingTree survey.
Millennials (41 percent) and Gen Z adults (37 percent) were the most likely to admit to stealing at self-checkout, while only 2 percent of Baby Boomers said the same. Men (38 percent) were more than twice as likely as women (16 percent) to say they’ve done it...
Interestingly, those with household incomes of $100,000 or more were the most likely (40 percent) to say they’ve intentionally taken an item without scanning it. Just 17 percent of those making less than $30,000 said the same.
Stores rethink how widely they use self-checkout...