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RFID Tags on Mach3 Razorblades Snap Your Photo

peteo writes "Think RFID tags are harmless? Look at how they are being used in the UK: "At the Tesco Cambridge store, a camera trained on the Gillette blade shelf, and triggered by RFID tags, captures a photo of each customer who removes a Mach3 pack. Another photo is taken at the checkout and security staff compare the two images to ensure they always have a pair" According to the spokesman,"there are certainly not any privacy concerns" in relation to these tags. He adds that there is plenty of in-store signage indicating the supermarket's use of CCTV cameras. ""

579 comments

  1. Buh-wah? by felistigre · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When were razor blades so valuable to warrant this?

    1. Re:Buh-wah? by Phibz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Last time i bought some replacement electric razor blades (little round blades and screens) it cost $25.

      Phibz

    2. Re:Buh-wah? by Morologous · · Score: 5, Funny

      In my local grocery store they were such a frequently-stolen item that they had to be removed from the aisles. Now, if you want a pack of Mach3s you have to go up to the pharmacy and get them to hand them to you personally.

      That is, of course, after you show two forms of picture ID, at least one showing you with a beard. They then perform a cursory measurement of your existing stubble and review your past purchases of razor blades to determine whether you actually need the blades or not. Cap it all off with an American-as-apple-pie dirty look and you've got your shopping experience.

      -jason

    3. Re:Buh-wah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      What's funny is how you will see the blades on sale at Flea Markets. Gilette says that the blades can only be sold with a proper vendor licence. So where do the blades come from.

      It's a big problem everywhere. I worked security in grocery stores for a while, and there were weeks that they lost thousands of dollars in these blades.

      The next biggest item for shoplifters.... big packs of chewing gum. Go figure (actually, another big flea market item)

    4. Re:Buh-wah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just another reason to switch to a straight razor.

    5. Re:Buh-wah? by Drakin · · Score: 1

      For a long time. particuarly the mach 3's. they're bloody expensive.

      They're small, easily stealable, and a lot of time they resell them for a tidy profit.

    6. Re:Buh-wah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple pie was common in England well before you lot settled in America. So please stop using the phrase "American as apple pie". Thanks.

    7. Re:Buh-wah? by WindBourne · · Score: 3, Funny

      Just another reason to switch to a straight razor.
      I did. Now I am sitting in this cell at the airport.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    8. Re:Buh-wah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but did you boil the snot out of it first?

      english cuisine... yeh, i beleive that one...

    9. Re:Buh-wah? by CoolVibe · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Like I care. It does however put a new dimension to the activity of generating so much false positives that they will turn it off.

      Imagine this scenario:

      • I grab a mach3 pack
      • The thingy takes my picture
      • I put it back
      • I grab another mach3 pack
      • The thingy takes my picture
      • I put it back
      • I grab another mach3 pack
      • The thingy takes my picture
      • I put it back
      • repeat several more times...
      • walk out the store
      • come back next day and do it again. Tell your friends, let them do that too
      Isn't civil disobedience grand? :)
    10. Re:Buh-wah? by blincoln · · Score: 1

      This was modded funny, but the first part is true in many areas. Apparently in Vancouver, BC, there is even a fairly brisk business done in stolen Mach 3 blades at the flea market.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    11. Re:Buh-wah? by operagost · · Score: 1

      Just make sure that you're ready to defend yourself in court. You'll need a lawyer to subpoena the video tapes and/or computer logs so that you can prove you put them back. If they're pissed enough they'll try to prosecute you even though they know you put them back.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    12. Re:Buh-wah? by packeteer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Its that price that makes them stolen so much. If someone steals a couple boxes of razors and sells them at a flea market they can make a few hundred dollars very qickly.

      I read that Gilette is buying 500 million RFID tags and will start putting them in their razor packages. At that quanitity its sitll cheap but reduces losses. Up to 20% of their razors are stolen in a year so its worth it for them to o something.

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    13. Re:Buh-wah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And a lot of times I'm out of blades and the store doesn't have any either!

    14. Re:Buh-wah? by AnotherBrian · · Score: 2, Interesting
      That's a good idea, but they could fix it easily by dumping the photo record attached to the tag if it ti returned to the shelf. I'd bet the security system already does this. Try this scenario:
      • I grab a mach3 pack
      • The thingy takes my picture
      • I give it to one of my friends that that coincidently decided to shop for razors on the same day.
      • My friend purchase the razor and I walk out of the store
      • Repeat
    15. Re:Buh-wah? by sharkey · · Score: 1
      That is, of course, after you show two forms of picture ID, at least one showing you with a beard. They then perform a cursory measurement of your existing stubble and review your past purchases of razor blades to determine whether you actually need the blades or not. Cap it all off with an American-as-apple-pie dirty look and you've got your shopping experience.

      Still easier than getting a driver's license in Indiana.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    16. Re:Buh-wah? by SacredNaCl · · Score: 1

      You obviously haven't been to a store lately. A 12 pack of Mach 3 blades at the Wal-Mart in my town is $19-20.

      Even the Sensor XL blades are like $16.

      It's enough to get me to go back to using my norelco. :)

      --
      Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
    17. Re:Buh-wah? by ElderKorean · · Score: 1

      Often when shopping, I'll be going to a few stored over the day.

      If there are none on the shelves then I'll just pick them up somewhere else, as they are obviously not available here today.

    18. Re:Buh-wah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i thought it was like there in pretty much every NA city.

      fucking expensive pieces of sh*t they are

      why sell the razor when you can sell the blades

    19. Re:Buh-wah? by Phishpin · · Score: 1

      I took a 2 minute test and drove around the block a few times with a fat guy in the car with me. Didn't seem so hard to me. Perhaps you have had different circumstances?

      --
      -phish
    20. Re:Buh-wah? by Halloween+Jack · · Score: 1

      Three basic factors at work here: small size, high cost (relative to other razor blades), and nearly 50% of the adult population uses them. The last one is crucial; there are actually smaller and more expensive things things on the shelf, but they're not in as much demand.

      --
      I looked into the abyss, and the abyss looked into me--and we both winked.
    21. Re:Buh-wah? by sharkey · · Score: 1

      When did you do this? The BWV here instituted a new "ID requirements" program last July. 2 unique pieces of ID to renew your license, up to 4 required to get your first license.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    22. Re:Buh-wah? by Donut2099 · · Score: 1

      How do you produce 4 forms of ID if one of them is not a drivers license?

    23. Re:Buh-wah? by I.A.N.A.T. · · Score: 0

      What's funny is how you will see the blades on sale at Flea Markets.

      Gee, and here I thought that flea markets somehow managed to get special deals on electronics and car stereo systems from the manufacturers! You mean the $45 27" Sony tv I saw at a flea market may have been stolen? Or the dvds for 2 bucks apiece? What a shame. I remember a time when flea markets weren't thought to be havens of stolen and unsafe goods...oh wait, no I don't.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is the greatest country in the world doesn't mean we're superior...oh wait, yes it does.
    24. Re:Buh-wah? by I.A.N.A.T. · · Score: 0

      Just make sure that you're ready to defend yourself in court. You'll need a lawyer to subpoena the video tapes and/or computer logs so that you can prove you put them back. If they're pissed enough they'll try to prosecute you even though they know you put them back.

      Well, that's utter bullshit. They can not prosecute you. Businesses do not prosecute. They can press charges, but in this case, the police WOULD NOT PROSECUTE you. (and the law would be the entity prosecuting you, anyhow, not the store.)
      In any case, taking items off the shelf and then replacing them is not a crime. You would only be prosecuted if you walked out of their store with their merchandise (and again, the store would not be prosecuting you, Johnny Law would). Since their camera records people taking blades off the shelf, I imagine it would record them putting them back as well. If they know you put them back, they'd be stupid to try having you prosecuted. You need no lawyer to subpoena anything (which they don't have the power to do anyway). You don't have to prove you put the razor blades back, they would have to prove you did not, which they would be unable to do. Were they to make the HUGE mistake of calling the police on you, the police would watch the tapes, and/or pat you down or ask you to empty your pockets. Then they would apologize to you and hopefully you'd file a complaint with the store's branch manager/regional manager. People seem to have this (perhaps tv-inspired) fantasy that businesses can prosecute you, for things that aren't crimes, simply because they are 'mad at you'. However, the only legal action a business can take against you directly is to sue you, and that would be patently ridiculous in this case.
      Did you watch an episode of Ally McBeal to learn words like 'subpoena' and 'prosecute?' I ask because you should really learn what words mean before you use them.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is the greatest country in the world doesn't mean we're superior...oh wait, yes it does.
    25. Re:Buh-wah? by I.A.N.A.T. · · Score: 0

      That's a good idea, but they could fix it easily by dumping the photo record attached to the tag if it ti returned to the shelf. I'd bet the security system already does this. Try this scenario:

      Or this alternate one:

      Grab a mach3 pack off the shelf

      Wander around the store, deftly inserting it on a shelf in a completely unrelated department

      repeat

      Remember: It isn't illegal to put things back in the wrong place, it's just (mildly) cruel to the poor drones working there.
      If I knew where a store was in my area that did this, I would have a GREAT time blowing up furiously at them if they met me at the door/in the parking lot. I'd tell them to go ahead and call the cops, but that I'd sue them for harassment and discrimination when they found no razor blades on my person. I'd yell and scream and curse very loudly and just generally have a blast. I'd put in calls to the branch manager, regional manager...whoever I could get..assuming it's a chain store. Now, I realize that I'd never win any litigation, so I wouldn't actually file any....but it's always a nice threat. It also makes a nice impression to the other customers: "Hey, I didn't do anything and here you are harassing me! Hey other customers, watch out, if you don't look just like the manager, he'll call you a shoplifter! They don't like my kind around here! Watch your backs, they think you're all theives" etc etc. Now, would any of that accomplish anything? other than my own personal amusement, no. But it would be fun, and maybe after a few episodes of that they'd stop trusting their cameras so much.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is the greatest country in the world doesn't mean we're superior...oh wait, yes it does.
    26. Re:Buh-wah? by plover · · Score: 1
      And nothing will happen.

      Nothing will happen because you didn't walk out of the door through the security cameras with an unpaid-for packet of razor blades.

      The system won't care if you pick them up, put them down, turn them all around, or whatever. The only time anything is triggered is when one passes out the door. The photographs taken at the time of pickup establish a link between the person taking them from the shelf and the person posessing unpaid-for merchandise leaving the store.

      The photos provide more evidence that the person posessing them intentionally took them from the shelf. If they are video cameras, they may also provide a visual record that the person taking them stuffed them down their shirt or in their pockets with intent to conceal them.

      This is really not that different than what happens today, except the stores are being more discriminating about what they're filming rather than blanket-filming everything and sorting it all out later.

      --
      John
    27. Re:Buh-wah? by sharkey · · Score: 1

      • Drivers license (just can't be by itself)
      • Various (credit, power, phone)bills with your current address.
      • Military ID
      • CCW
      • State ID card
      • Govt. Employee ID

      The list goes on. There are 4 categories you fall into, based on current residence, previous residence, current license, etc. The ACLU has filed a lawsuit against the Indiana BMV over this. Can you imagine moving to a new state and having to wait a month or more to get a driver's license, simply because your bills haven't come in?

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    28. Re:Buh-wah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Picking stuff up, carrying it around, and putting it down somewhere else (a lot) is a well recogized sign of a possible shoplifter... They'd probably be able to get the police to search you.

      You'd at least be banned from the store, whether you were shoplifting or not; and if you ever came back they'd press charges for trespassing.

      That is, of course assuming they're not one of the chains with a turnover so high there'd be none of the same staff next week.

    29. Re:Buh-wah? by I.A.N.A.T. · · Score: 0

      Picking stuff up, carrying it around, and putting it down somewhere else (a lot) is a well recogized sign of a possible shoplifter... They'd probably be able to get the police to search you.

      They could *maybe* get the police to *ask* you to empty your pockets, or at the very worst, they may give you a pat down. But they won't do anything more than that unless they find contraband. I've been accused of being a shoplifter many times because I am extremely picky and I change my mind a lot. Whenever it happens, I tell them to call the cops, and that I'll be filing a complaint against them when I am vindicated, which I know to be a certainty. Usually they drop it right there, and the one time they *did* call the cops on me, they gave me a gift cert for 50 bucks because I had nothing on me, just like I told them. Far from banning me from the store, they instead fell all over themselves apologizing. Your location may be different, but I *highly* doubt they would ban you from the store for *not* stealing. If they did, I would file a harassment charge against them, citing their false accusation and subsequent banning.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is the greatest country in the world doesn't mean we're superior...oh wait, yes it does.
    30. Re:Buh-wah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mark of the beast are you listening??????

  2. Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by blowdart · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I only know this because they have a do it yourself barcode scanner for shopping and razor blades always come up as "Declare to cashier".

    Last week I asked why. The cashier said it's because kids go in and steal them a lot, then come back the next day and ask for the money back (a pack of 8 is rather expensive, and they are easy to slip into pockets). So Waitrose watch the blades carefully and always check reciepts.

    1. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by Nodatadj · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, Razor blades are apparently the most commonly shoplifted item in the UK

    2. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by delphi125 · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Most Dutch supermarkets simply have the razor blades along with the cigarettes at a seperate counter (along with batteries etc.)

      I'd also be suspicious of a kid (which makes me think of up to 12 or so rather than 16) returning razor blades anyway!

    3. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The only difference I see is shops selling Mach 3 prey on the gullible, while shoplifters prey on the shops.

      Okay, I've overstated things, but when the shopkeeper is selling an object for greater than 1000 times its cost, they're motivated by greed just as much as the shoplifter is. 'Two wrongs don't make a right', but neither of them should demand sympathy.

    4. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What happens on halloween? Everyone's wearing a mask as they pick up their shavin' sticks. Hey wait, the witch didn't buy the razor, the mummy did.

    5. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Ummm...then call me gullible. Those are damn good razors. I use them, I pay for them. The cost of producing something has little to do with the price it's sold for. It's all about the pricing the market will bear. People are willing to pay that much for the blades, so that's what the store charges. Nobody's forcing you to buy the damn things. Grow up.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    6. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      why??

      I buy Mach3 blades in bulk at the local Costco (a warehouse style store that sells everything in huge quanities).

      I buy them in a pack of 30 or something. . . . $25 or $30, can't remember the exact price. Lasts for ages.

    7. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by smeenz · · Score: 1

      Forgive me for sounding dumb, but how does a 'do it yourself' barcode scanning work ? Is that just for finding out what the price is on something, or are you saying that place actually lets you scan your own groceries and just pay the money at the end ?

    8. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by zebs · · Score: 1
      but how does a 'do it yourself' barcode scanning work ? Is that just for finding out what the price is on something, or are you saying that place actually lets you scan your own groceries and just pay the money at the end ?

      A lot of supermarkets in the UK have a handheld barcode scanner which you use to scan items as you put them in your trolly. When you get the the checkout, you hand the scanner over and your recipt is printed and you pay the bill. You may - randomly - be "rescanned", where everything in your trolly (or sometimes just part of it) is scanned.

      To use the self scan you have to have the stores loyalty card. So I guess maybe they track the items you purchase, total amounts, maybe even time spent in the store.

      I guess it works well as Sainsburys, Tesco, and Safeway have the system... I just wish my local supermarket (Asda) did.

    9. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forgive me for sounding dumb, but how does a 'do it yourself' barcode scanning work ? Is that just for finding out what the price is on something, or are you saying that place actually lets you scan your own groceries and just pay the money at the end ?

      Yes, absolutely.

      It's a really excellent way of shopping. You put your Waitrose Account Card into a slot near the entrance to the store. It gives you a hand scanner which slots into a holder on the trolley.

      For all of the prepackaged produce you simply scan the barcode on the packaging. For loose individual items there are barcodes on the shelf edges. Fruit and veg are weighed on a machine (you press a button with a picture of the fruit/veg you have) which produces a sticker with barcode.

      At the end of it all you put the scanner back into the wall, and it prints another barcode (spotting a pattern yet). During your first few uses of the system, they do have a random recheck, they scan everything manually to make sure you've got the hang of it.

      To pay you put the piece of paper into a reader on something that looks a bit like a freestanding ATM. It then processes the scanned barcodes, totting up 3 for 2 and other offers, printing the actual reciept. You then put your debit/credit/account card into a normal magnetic reader. It does make things go a lot quicker, and is great fun!

    10. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by Snaller · · Score: 1

      I'd also be suspicious of a kid (which makes me think of up to 12 or so rather than 16) returning razor blades anyway!

      That's why he is returning them! He realised he didn't have a beard!

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    11. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A communist on Slashdot - whodathunkit!

    12. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Pick up razor blades; smile for camera.
      2. Drop razor blades in some other section.
      3. ???
      4. Profit!!!

    13. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by jandrese · · Score: 1

      The local Harris Teeter has those self checkout things. It's basically one aisle that has 4 self checkout counters and one "supervisor". It's great if you only have a few items because people don't seem to like them a lot, so there's almost always at least one open. The downside is that the mechanism is a bit slow (you have to place whatever item you just scanned into the bag before scanning the next item, which is somewhat inefficent). If you buy alcohol the machine stops and you have to go up to the cashier to show them your ID. Coupons work fine (just scan them in), produce is done the same way the cashiers do it, you punch in the four digit code on the sticker (or look it up if the sticker is missing), and either weigh it on the scanner or just punch in the quantity. When you're done you can either scan a credit/debit card, or walk up to the supervisor to pay cash/check. If you use a credit card you have to walk up to the supervisor to sign the recipt, but with a debit card you don't even have to do that.

      The system works great, and it means I can checkout in 5 minutes almost every time. It's far faster than the "express" lane 90% of the time. The only time I go to the cashiers is when I've got a lot of groceries.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    14. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by Nodatadj · · Score: 1

      Who knows.
      Probably because they're very small.

      I would doubt its so that the thief can shave.

    15. Re:Waitrose have a camera on the razor blades... by eckythump · · Score: 1

      not just kids... many drug addicts in many countries in the world have to go through this rigmarole to get their daily fix ... that is one dude goes through walks straight out stuffs a handfull of reciepts into his pocket from the bin near the exit, then someone else (for safety) goes in and steals the products on the lists.. and finally (for added safety) a third person needs to go and do the returns ... ha, kids indeed

  3. Welcome back sir! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Seeing as this is the fourth time this month you've purchased genital wart cream, perhaps you'd be better off moving up to Genwartrexol?

    1. Re:Welcome back sir! by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Genwartrexol

      What made me think this would be the name of a walmart own brand item?

    2. Re:Welcome back sir! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was a joke marketing form letter some time ago, based on the sort of data mining that stores might be able to do with any form of ID.

      It started off by noting that the addressee's girlfriend had leased an apartment elsewhere in town, and that they had noticed from store records that the addressee had stopped buying flowers and condoms.

      It closed by promoting porn and suggesting that the addressee purchase a life-size blow-up doll.

  4. Is this really so much worse... by 26199 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...than plain old CCTV? Alright, so it's a little unsettling to think of someone with a photo of you taking something off the shelf comparing it with other photos to see if you bought the thing... but odds are if there's a CCTV camera then they're watching you as you take things off the shelf then, too.

    Hmm. Doing this without telling people, however, is certainly cause for objection... there should be a sign of some sort, I suppose...

    I would imagine that legally it doesn't require anything more than 'CCTV in use on these premesis', since the camera would have been there anyway...?

    1. Re:Is this really so much worse... by aking137 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Possibly - here, they're demonstrating the ability to link your identity with what you buy, and fairly automatically, en masse. Potentially, this could allow the authorities to track practically every "new" object you bought. Imagine if five years down the line, the police raid your house because they suspect you of something, and then they look at the RFID tags of lots of items in your house, and are able to tell exactly who bought what item and when (from their big database that's full of dates, times, photos, places, lists of items, etc). Or they might just simply keep track of all the stuff you're buying over a set period of time and then start drawing conclusions from it.

      My understanding at the moment is that you do have to display a sign in the UK if you're filming the public. I doubt you have to do anything extra if you're attempting to link this footage with what's being taken off your shelves too though. It's no doubt being rolled out all over the place already.

      I've already quit my job to avoid having a need for one of those identity cards, I've already sent back my driving license and made do with a push bike to stop them tracking me by my number plate, and I got my mobile crushed last week. Looks like I'm going to have to start an allotment now too!

    2. Re:Is this really so much worse... by TopShelf · · Score: 1, Funny

      Oh come on, this is /. - any technical innovation that actually helps companies prevent consumers from stealing their product is just another sign of corporate tyranny, dude...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    3. Re:Is this really so much worse... by DarkEdgeX · · Score: 1

      I didn't used to have a problem with CCTV until I went to a local Wal-Mart for the first time-- the parking lot was rigged with at least 50 cameras. I obviously can't verify that each one is real, but in this age of cheap hard drives and video recorders, and the fact that Wal-Mart is quite the profitable company, I doubt that they're all decoys.

      And that's not counting the cameras IN the store...

      --
      All I know about Bush is I had a good job when Clinton was president.
    4. Re:Is this really so much worse... by 26199 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ah, yes, well, RFID tags in general -- I was just commenting on the photograph part. RFID tags that stay in place could be bad... but in this case, they're part of the packaging, surely? And so not really a problem... who keeps the packaging for their razor blades?

    5. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Qzukk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Do they also take a picture when you put it back on the shelf? What if you bumped the shelf and knocked one off with your cart and put it back? What if you picked one up and decided that some other brand was a better deal? On the hardware side, what happens if someone spends half an hour removing and putting back razor blades? I suppose this is all digital, but do they have a flash card big enough for that many photos?

      Continuous non-discrimatory survellience is fine by me, but this idea clearly has issues that may not have been thought through by Tesco. Its these issues that bother me whenever privacy concerns come up: "What happens to the people when automated systems fuck up?"

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    6. Re:Is this really so much worse... by nullard · · Score: 1

      They could achieve the same benefit from a sbelf load sensor or something. It looks like it's being used so that the camera doesn't always have to be on. I think that people jump on this because of the RFIDs, but that it isn't that big a deal otherwise. Hell, if they have RFIDs anyway, why not just catch shoplifters by detecting them at the door?

      --


      t'nera semordnilap
    7. Re:Is this really so much worse... by surprise_audit · · Score: 1
      Hmm. Doing this without telling people, however, is certainly cause for objection... there should be a sign of some sort, I suppose...

      That's probably why the spokesman for the store said that there's

      plenty of in-store signage indicating the supermarket's use of CCTV cameras.

      And anyway, if after the first purchase of Mach3's you decide that you don't like their policy, you don't have to go back to Tesco. I'm sure Boots, Woolworth and other smaller stores sell Mach3s...

      Many stores have signs up saying that some kind of CCTV is in use. The bottom line is that they're protecting their inventory, as they have a right to do, and in so doing they're keeping their prices down. Anyone who doesn't like it is free to either walk out and go elsewhere and/or write a complaint to the CEO.P>Besides which, I'm sure at least a few of the CCTV cameras are fake... The problem being, which ones??

    8. Re:Is this really so much worse... by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      Why is it that discount stores are always the most paranoid about shoplifting? You would think that the cheaper prices would make it *less* likely. Perhaps the not so bright shoplifters somehow think that stealing an item selling for $7.99 at Walmart will get them a lighter sentence than the same item selling for $10.99 at another store?

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    9. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Ella+the+Cat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I am tempted, should this arrive at my local Tesco, to carefully put the damn things in my basket, smiling for the camera, walk to another aisle, and put them on another shelf. Just out of interest, am I deemed to have bought them when I pick them up, or when I go through the checkout?

    10. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they see you remove one, but the system doesn't trigger on replacement, they would simply scan the real tape to see if you replaced it.

    11. Re:Is this really so much worse... by pv2b · · Score: 1

      They have more to lose, since their profit margins aren't as high.

    12. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Ella+the+Cat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Surely this hangs on the customer's understanding of CCTV? RFID isn't CCTV. Machines (ok, sloppy programmers, whatever) drawing conclusions about my activities instead of reasoning humans. Same deal with speed cameras, plod nabs me, it's a fair cop, but how do I argue against dodgy electronics or the lunacy of being busted at 2 am for doing 5 mph over on an industrial estate? If I see CCTV I think it should imply either humans watching me or humans watching recordings. The security industry has had to accept that MPEG-4 isn't admissiblle because of the predictive coding (hence MJPEG). Or something. Mumble.

    13. Re:Is this really so much worse... by HaloZero · · Score: 1

      The CCTV cameras in parking lots, espicially Wal*Marts, is to protect the shopping carts, oddly enough. A member of my family helped develop the system that Wal*Mart uses for just that task.

      --
      Informatus Technologicus
    14. Re:Is this really so much worse... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      A couple of years ago, my mother was visiting Rolla Missouri, had her car parked in front of a Walmart when some vandals smashed the back window in. Surprisenly it was during the day, and the car was parked close to the front of the store. She noticed that there was a camera pointed right at her car too. When she went into Walmart to inquire about footage from the camera, they were most rude and unhelpful, and told her that those cameras "weren't even on". Uh huh. Even the police were worthless, only acknowledging that there have been problems with vandals in the area - probably because they wouldn't get off their fat lazy asses and do anything about it.

      On the good side, the local Nissan dealership who she brought her car to was very kind and sympathetic and got her back on her way very quickly. And luckily the insurance paid for the replacement.

    15. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Possibly - here, they're demonstrating the ability to link your identity with what you buy, and fairly automatically, en masse. Potentially, this could allow the authorities to track practically every "new" object you bought.

      Um... Most of the major supermarket chains in the UK, including Tesco and Sainsburys, have a "loyalty card" scheme that allows them to do just that, in exchange for a small discount on your shopping. These are used to target advertising, adjust product lines according to customer demand, etc. They don't tell you in as many words that this is what the cards are for, but everyone with an ounce of brain matter knows it, no-one really makes a secret of it at the stores, and it seems the vast majority of their customers voluntarily get such a card, supplying the required information in exchange for a discount.

      So yes, they can theoretically track every new purchase you make, as long as you use the card with it. That's the whole point. If you don't like that, don't get the card, but the vast majority of people don't seem to care.

      I'm curious to know what they gain by this arrangement, though. There are already scanners on the door at that Tesco (my local branch, half a mile from my home) that are supposed to detect anyone walking out with security tagged goods that haven't been paid for, and a security guard by the door. (The same is true of pretty much every major supermarket over here, and most high street clothing stores etc. where there's a big risk of theft.) What does this gain them, a picture if someone manages to get through the alarmed section and past the guard without setting them off? In that case, what if someone else picked up the tagged item, got photographed, and then replaced it on the shelf, prior to a second person stealing them? Oo-er, doesn't sound promising. Maybe I'll just buy my razors from Sainsburys (the other big supermarket, half a mile in the other direction) instead...

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    16. Re:Is this really so much worse... by WCMI92 · · Score: 1

      "Oh come on, this is /. - any technical innovation that actually helps companies prevent consumers from stealing their product is just another sign of corporate tyranny, dude..."

      Then you won't object to the police RFID'ing all your posessions and putting CCD cameras with RFID readers in your home, car, office, etc.

      After all, that'd greatly reduce the chance of you stealing, and if you do, it'd catch you.

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
    17. Re:Is this really so much worse... by meta-monkey · · Score: 2, Interesting

      We have the same card schemes here in the states. I don't mind at all...I have cards for all the major stores near me, and I always make sure to use my card whenever I shop. They don't have my name or address or anything...it only tracks what I buy, not who I am. My bill's a little lower, and the register prints out coupons for me when I check out. The coupons are great, because they're for items I might actually want to buy, because they know about the other sorts of things I buy.

      For example, I drink a lot of beer. I like dark beers, but usually buy the cheapest dark beer they have, like Amber Bock or Yuengling. A couple times when I went through the checkout line, the machine printed out a coupon for $2 off a six pack of Guiness. I love Guiness...I just can't afford it all the time. Eventually I got three six packs for only $5 each, instead of the usual seven. That sounds great to me...I don't care if they want to use my shopping habits for their research. They're compensating me for it with the discounts, and nobody's forcing me to use the card.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    18. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, the clientele are of a lower caliber than that of a boutique.

    19. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See! That's why everybody should carry guns so if they saw that shit going down they'd go *BLAM BLAM BLAM BLAM* *KERBLAM* *POW POW POW* and then the bad guys would be dead and everybody would cheer and...oh man, I'm toasted...

    20. Re:Is this really so much worse... by WCMI92 · · Score: 1

      Around here, Kroger was the first to introduce these things.

      And to get it you HAVE to give them your name, address, phone number, date of birth, sex, etc. Which they have of me, just not the correct ones ;)

      At first, it was advantageous to get one because they actually DID offer lower prices on some items. But now they just make it impossible to get NORMAL prices on staple items unless you have it. Not SALE prices, NORMAL prices. Don't have your Kroger card? Then be prepared to pay $6 for a 12-pack of Coke instead of $3.

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
    21. Re:Is this really so much worse... by jovlinger · · Score: 1

      how DARE you link to my router for your home page? Stop it at once!

    22. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Skjellifetti · · Score: 1

      And to get it you HAVE to give them your name, address, phone number, date of birth, sex, etc. Which they have of me, just not the correct ones ;)

      That works only if you pay cash for every purchase. As soon as you use your debit/credit card, they can match a real name with that discount card. Its a real pickle of a problem. I don't want them amassing all that data on me either, but tonight we are having salmon that was marked $25 for a whole fish w/out the card and $5 with the card.

    23. Re:Is this really so much worse... by HBI · · Score: 3, Funny

      You'd be less afraid of this if you knew the horrid state most government computer systems are in.

      I imagine this theoretical database would be the most horrible conglomeration of utter shit you'd ever have seen. The chances of any useful searches being done on it would be nearly nil, considering what the average government dweeb is like.

      This doesn't scare me much actually, nor do I care if a store wants to film me while I buy things. I got accused of theft by some rent-a-cop back when I was about 18 - this would have assured that experience would have never happened. I still hope that guy develops a nasty case of genital warts nonetheless.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    24. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does that really exist? I've seen many such attempts go sour through the courts.

    25. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Or when you get to the cashier, maybe you'll get strip-searched in pursuit of the "missing" blades.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    26. Re:Is this really so much worse... by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      And they're understaffed compared to a more expensive stores where there's more employees to keep an eye on the customers, i.e. "can I help you find something today?"

    27. Re:Is this really so much worse... by plugger · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I imagine that you are logged when picking up the razorblades, and again when you pay for them. I guess that any discrepancy is flagged and you picture is added to a list of 'suspicious characters'. According to an article in the Guardian yesterday, Tesco say that they store the pictures 'temporarily'.

      What you could do is consistently pick up the razorblades every time you visit, place them on another shelf whilst you are shopping and check out without buying them. Then, write to Tesco's Data Controller and ask if they are holding any information on you. Tell them what you have been doing and state that you believe they might have a photo of you. Pay the £10 charge and supply a photo of yourself to help them check. If a few thousand customers did this, they would probably find running the scheme very expensive. They might also be unable to respond within a reasonable time (not sure if there is a statutory response time). That would then put them in breach of Data Protection law.

    28. Re:Is this really so much worse... by RALE007 · · Score: 1
      "Ah, yes, well, RFID tags in general -- I was just commenting on the photograph part. RFID tags that stay in place could be bad... but in this case, they're part of the packaging, surely? And so not really a problem... who keeps the packaging for their razor blades?"

      Read the article:

      "...The next phase in tag implementation came with trials on theft-prone products, such as DVDs and razorblades - a murky and seemingly opaque development but, you might say, partly alleviated by the fact that the tags are on the product packaging and can therefore be discarded.

      Now, however, the tags are inching their way even deeper into our products. Speaking at the RFID Journal Live! conference in Chicago in June, Keith Mahoney of Marks & Spencer reportedly said, 'Item level tagging is the holy grail.' ..."

      So yes, at this point the RFID's are in the packaging, but the next step is to have them in the actual product.

      From your comment

      "...but in this case, they're part of the packaging, surely?..."

      Don't call me Shirley dammit!

      --
      Beware blue cats moving at .99c
    29. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      they would simply scan the real tape to see if you replaced it.

      Thats a lot of work. Wouldn't it be easier just to arrest you and sort it all out?

      It would make more sense to me to take pictures of the people checking out with them, and the people leaving with them. Just picking them up is too ambiguous.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    30. Re:Is this really so much worse... by jechonias · · Score: 1

      Interesting that you use the term "allotment", most of your international readers probably won't know what you mean, but my father used to have one so I know where you are going with that statement:

      "Allotment : small section of ground reserved for the purpose of growing plants / veggies etc, popular due to the fact that so many british people don't have large enough spaces of ground to grow items on their own properties".

      Interesting to think that the concept of having a small space of land to grow your own food on sounds so fuedual, and yet we live in the 21st century.

      Perhaps thats most don't bother growing their own food any more?

    31. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Omestes · · Score: 1

      No, you don't have to. I used an alias, so my local Fry's (krogers) think that I am McGilla Guerilla, seriously. Never actually asked for my name, just handed me the form, then the cards. Someone somewhere is compiling that McGilla Guerilla really likes cheap gallon jugs of Vodka and Cheesepuffs. Now that is research.

      Seriously though, I would have refused the card if they needed my REAL name and REAL address, and REAL phone number, not so much because of privacy, but because of 'exciting advertising oppertunites".

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    32. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Snaller · · Score: 1

      ...than plain old CCTV? Alright, so it's a little unsettling to think of someone with a photo of you taking something off the shelf comparing it with other photos to see if you bought the thing... but odds are if there's a CCTV camera then they're watching you as you take things off the shelf then, too.

      The point is, if you read article, its a slippery slope. The goal/dream is for RFIDs to be in ALL products on the planet. And they most people won't be able to see the thiny things (especially if they are inside or sown into clothes), so all things you buy are branded and can be scanned. Perhaps some burglars get hold of scanners, they can scan your house from the outside to see if you have something worth actually stealing. Or the government could do that. In the US they already started to analyze what the terrorists bought. Imagine suddnly being arrested because they thing you are a terrorists because you happen to like the wrong kind of food, or other wise happen to match a profile?

      Of course it will happen, as they say in the article, research indicates that people don't like it but can't be bothered to get of their ass and do something about it...

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    33. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The security industry has had to accept that MPEG-4 isn't admissiblle because of the predictive coding (hence MJPEG). Or something. Mumble.

      Huh? But VHS is OK? What the fuck is the reason behind that?

    34. Re:Is this really so much worse... by bokmann · · Score: 1

      Those loyalty cards are now in just about every grocery store across the U.S... I wonder if the shopping records have ever been subpoened for a lawsuit...

      "Sir, can you tell me why you were buying condoms when your wife was on birth control?"

    35. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Destree · · Score: 1

      Or they will just raise prices on the items to compensate for the higher cost of selling them, paying extra to buy something because they don't wan't people stealing them, what a concept, it'll happen to little things, already does on big ticket items.

    36. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1
      We have the same card schemes here in the states. [...] They don't have my name or address or anything...it only tracks what I buy, not who I am.

      That's not quite the same thing, then. The cards we have in the UK require name, address and often a small amount of background information (age group and the like) when you sign up. In other words, they very much are technically capable of monitoring individuals. There are various comments about this in the data protection policies that go with the schemes.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    37. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Around here, Kroger was the first to introduce these things.

      And to get it you HAVE to give them name, address, phone number, date of birth, sex, etc. Which they have of me, just not the correct ones ;)


      No, you have to give them a name,name, address, phone number, date of birth, sex,etc.

      After I went through the Great Dictators of History (tm) series (all of whom seemed to move to the US and by cheap beer at Krogers - except for the African ones, who buy expensive beer with the millions they have after people on the internet help get the cash out of Africa), I began on the dead Presidents series ( I often forget my card and get a new one at the store.)

      Their data collection, if users properly game the system, is more garbage in, garbage out.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    38. Re:Is this really so much worse... by The+Madpostal+Worker · · Score: 1

      When you sign up they generally give you a bunch of cards, so give some of them to strangers. Make their data useless. Suddently they can't be certain that you're the one making a purchase in a place.

      --

      /*
      *Not a Sermon, Just a Thought
      */
    39. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Now what on earth makes you think the credit card company have my real name and address? ;-)

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    40. Re:Is this really so much worse... by packeteer · · Score: 1

      RFID tags are going to or already are being put into many over the counter medications. These are easily stolen and sold at flea markets which makes theives a lot of money. Also meny cold pills with certain chemicals are being tracked becuase of the ability to use them as a precursor in making all kinds of illicit drugs.

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    41. Re:Is this really so much worse... by TekPolitik · · Score: 1

      am I deemed to have bought them when I pick them up, or when I go through the checkout?

      When the cashier puts the price into the register.

    42. Re:Is this really so much worse... by TekPolitik · · Score: 1

      Thats a lot of work. Wouldn't it be easier just to arrest you and sort it all out?

      Easier, perhaps, but the person arrested would be guaranteed a successful action for false imprisonment.

    43. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And my experience has been that if you always forget your card, the cashier will happily use his/her store card instead, so that you still get the discount. I've often wondered if that's a legal requirement, in fact.

    44. Re:Is this really so much worse... by pla · · Score: 1

      carefully put the damn things in my basket, smiling for the camera, walk to another aisle, and put them on another shelf.

      I had the exact opposite idea...

      Have a friend take them from the shelf, discretely pass them to me somewhere in the store out of sight of any security cameras, then I check out with them yet never actually picked them up off the shelf (no shoplifting involved, I mean to pay for them). This makes not one, but two unmatched photos for the rent-a-cops to have to deal with.

      "And can you... Can you imagine 50 people a day? I said 50 people a day? ... They may think it's a movement!

    45. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Ella+the+Cat · · Score: 1

      But VHS is OK? What the fuck is the reason behind that?

      VHS and MJPEG degrade the image, but they don't "make anything up", whereas (I'm told) MPEG-4 (which is used in security DVRs) has the problem that it does prediction from one frame to the next. So, in court, a blurry or noisy picture is OK, but a picture that the defence can argue is partly made up by a computer is not OK). Is that a razor blade in your hand, or just a coding artefact?

    46. Re:Is this really so much worse... by plugger · · Score: 1

      You might be right. Then again, if tagged items cost more than untagged items, perhaps customers will wake up and decide that we don't want them after all.

    47. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Mr.Gibs · · Score: 1

      Since the cameras are activated by the RFID tag itself, there wouldn't be a flag since the second picture would never be taken. Thus they would know you didn't leave the store with the item and must have placed it somewhere in the store.

      --
      I live to gib...
    48. Re:Is this really so much worse... by jandrese · · Score: 1

      I think it's the kind of people those discount retailers attract. Have you been to your local Wal*Mart and noticed the White Trash Factor? Plus these guys probably feel safer at Wal*Mart because they blend in with the crowd much better than they would at say Lord and Taylor.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    49. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Using a false name isn't really completely safe either, since any authority could just link you to your purchases by taking your card from you.

    50. Re:Is this really so much worse... by I.A.N.A.T. · · Score: 0

      Don't have your Kroger card? Then be prepared to pay $6 for a 12-pack of Coke instead of $3.

      Funny, that's what the convenience store close to my house charges, and they don't even offer me the option of a card to halve it. Unless I want to trek to the Super Walmart, I either pay the 6 bucks or don't have soda. There has to be more than one store in your town (or in a nearby town). Perhaps you should go to a different store. It's like my grandpappy always used to say: good, cheap, fast: pick two. If you want convenience, and you want not to be tracked, you pay more. Personally, I go to wallyworld when I have the time, pay cash, and get good prices with no discount card. When I'm in a hurry, I go to the corner store and they extract insane amounts of cash from me. However, at that point I'm paying for more than just soda, I'm paying for convenience. When the time comes that a store forces me to have some card with my real data connected to it just to go there, I'll stop shopping there forever, and you should too...but a discount card is nothing new and nothing nefarious. They just want to sell you something...like everyone else in the world.

      "Life *is* pain, Highness. Anyone who tells you different is selling something."

      --
      Just because the U.S. is the greatest country in the world doesn't mean we're superior...oh wait, yes it does.
    51. Re:Is this really so much worse... by I.A.N.A.T. · · Score: 0

      Then you won't object to the police RFID'ing all your posessions and putting CCD cameras with RFID readers in your home, car, office, etc. After all, that'd greatly reduce the chance of you stealing, and if you do, it'd catch you.

      How exactly does one steal one's own possessions?
      No, I don't count cheating on your taxes, either, although the gov't sure does think you're 'stealing' if you do that.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is the greatest country in the world doesn't mean we're superior...oh wait, yes it does.
    52. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Omestes · · Score: 1

      I really doubt that the police/NSA/FBI/CIA will be standing outside of Frys checking shoppercards. Though if I ever actually used my credit card they could almost connect me. Most stores allow other people to use their cards with other peoples purchases, making the the link VERY weak, since I've used my card for several other peoples purchases, and have used complete strangers cards for mine.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    53. Re:Is this really so much worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahhh...

      I see you've worked with the Salmonid Head Recovery Project dataset too.

    54. Re:Is this really so much worse... by cherry_eucalyptus · · Score: 1

      '...Item level tagging is the holy grail.'"

      Gee... the future looks *great*.

      "Ms. Eucalyptus, your tampon identifer shows you are currently having a moderate-to-heavy flow day, but we have not received a panty shield identifer signal. May we suggest Carefree brand?"

  5. Most stolen item in Britain by Yakman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Tin foil hat privacy issues aside, the reason for this is because Gilette Mach 3 Razor Blades are the most shoplifted item in Britain. This is due to Gilette's "strategy" of giving away the razors and charging through the nose for the blades.

    1. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by afternoon · · Score: 1

      Just like the big music and film companies, all the razor blade companies are in on the scam. They've very successully taken a bunch of laws designed to create a fair trade environment and used them to build a cartel that's not only perfectly legal, but is setting the precedent which the legislators are following.

      Urge to revolt, rising...

    2. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't some company market some clone blades? Patents? Dont make me laugh, its just a blade. Make a better cheaper one and you WIN.

      No aftermarket?

    3. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ergh... blades through nose?

    4. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by tomstdenis · · Score: 5, Funny

      Which is why us Canadians figured it out. We put the noname razors on shelves and the expensive super-uber-quality gilettes behind the counter. Whoa.

      Though I agree with another poster. It is just a scam. I mean you can buy 100x the weight in metal for the same price... there is a problem :-)

      Which is why people shouldn't shave. Too much hassle and really does it matter? Stop feeding stupi corporate three-razor extra-close super-smooth this bitch will fuck you if you use them razor companies.

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    5. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is why people shouldn't shave. Too much hassle and really does it matter?

      If we all stopped shaving, we'd all look like Alan Cox. That would really show how evolved we are when the aliens show up :)

    6. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      hehehehe but think of all the time saved by not shaving. We could use that to advance mank-ind!

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    7. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by peterprior · · Score: 1

      oh, the irony of that news story being on a .au site.

      Why the hell does australia care what the most shoplifted item in britain is ?

    8. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by pacman+on+prozac · · Score: 1

      Or splash out 40$ on an electric shaver and not have to bother buying anything until 2-3 years when it breaks. Screw buying blades every week.

      I have to say this does encourage me to start wrapping tinfoil around my head, since theres already designated "secure" area's in those shops, i.e. the place behind the counter they sell cigarettes/spirit minitures from, theres no valid reason not to use those (many shops do), other than either 1) retarded management who came up with the idea or 2) tinfoil hat time.

      Having lived in the UK most of my life I think the odds are in favour of #1.

    9. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Idarubicin · · Score: 2, Funny
      Stop feeding stupi corporate three-razor extra-close super-smooth this bitch will fuck you if you use them razor companies.

      It gets worse....

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    10. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Telecommando · · Score: 1

      Does anyone else remember the Saturday Night Live parody ad from the late 70's for Mach3 razors? It was right after the Mach2 razors came out. SNL's version explained how they worked with accompanying cartoon graphics. As I remember it want something like this:

      "The first blade lifts the whisker up, the second blade lifts it further and the third blade RIPS IT OUT BY THE ROOTS!"

      Then they'd show these people with blood running down their faces exclaiming it was the closest shave they ever had.

      I think that one joke ad probably prevented Gillette from introducing the Mach3 for many years.

      --
      Beta sux! Join the Slashcott! http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=4760465&cid=46173047
    11. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by The+Cydonian · · Score: 1
      Ah, but with stinking beards, you can't propagate mankind!

      Don't believe me? Just ask a certain single atheist white man with a "19-year-old child" that leaves "no room for more children". ;-)

    12. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by MrWa · · Score: 1
      Stop feeding stupi corporate three-razor extra-close super-smooth this bitch will fuck you if you use them razor companies.

      But she told me to shave despite all of my pleading - I even used the "Look how much money we can save argument" - so now it is really just a matter of finding the most comfortable blade that won't break the bank...

    13. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      We have exactly that here in the states. It's not quite as pretty as the Gillete, but I think the triple blades are just as sharp and they don't cost a small fortune. CVS and Stop & Shop sell them.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    14. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Gramie2 · · Score: 1

      I have to say, though, that the Mach 3 (haven't tried the Turbo) is far and away the best razor I have ever used.

      I've tried any number of other razors, used an electric, even had straight-razor shaves in Japanese barbershops, and nothing comes close. It's simply smoother, closer and more comfortable than anything else, and causes far less damage to my face.

      I resent the fact that they are gouging me on the blades, but a single blade lasts me for a month or more, and it's simply worth it to me.

    15. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right, aim for the hard target. Troll.

    16. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Danse · · Score: 1

      A month?! If I use the same one for a week it will start to get pretty uncomfortable.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    17. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Danse · · Score: 1

      If we all stopped shaving, we'd all look like Alan Cox. That would really show how evolved we are when the aliens show up :)

      But won't the aliens have serious doubts about our intellect when they see how much we pay for freaking razor blades?

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    18. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      how long until the individual blades or the razor itself have RFIDs and Gilette goes after people who make other razor blades with the DMCA ala Lexmark? They both have the same kinda business model.....sell product for dirt cheap (razor and printers) and sell refills at sky high prices (razor blades and ink).

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    19. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Captain+Positron · · Score: 1

      All right, fine. I'm moving back to a straight razor.

    20. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by maxume · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's getting dirty. Seriously, mineralization or some such process. They are stainless, so it isn't rusting, and believe it or not, your face and beard are pretty soft, compared to the metal, so the blade isn't getting dull. It might be bending though, if you are manhandling it a bit too much. Try making sure to whip the water off of the blades when you are done shaving, and maybe not storing it where there is lots of humidity. It might end up lasting a bit longer.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    21. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Well, just make sure you don't buy your tinfoil at Tesco, because they track it and then they'll know you're on to them.

      Seriously, nobody's forcing you to buy the razor, or the blades. There are several other companies that make razors. Or, you could switch to a straightedge, or an electric shaver, or grow a beard, or go to a barber. Use your freedom of choice.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    22. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by WCMI92 · · Score: 1

      "It's getting dirty. Seriously, mineralization or some such process. They are stainless, so it isn't rusting, and believe it or not, your face and beard are pretty soft, compared to the metal, so the blade isn't getting dull. It might be bending though, if you are manhandling it a bit too much. Try making sure to whip the water off of the blades when you are done shaving, and maybe not storing it where there is lots of humidity. It might end up lasting a bit longer."

      I use my Mach 3 blades far longer than "recommended". Each one lasts me at least a week, if not two. At $8 for a 4 pack, I'm paying $1-2 a week to shave.

      I rinse the thing off every time I use it, and don't change blades until it loses effectiveness.

      Don't discard the blade just because the green strip has worn down to white.

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
    23. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by maxume · · Score: 1

      I do about the same, although I have been known to make it up to a month. At the point, only after switching is the degredation noticable.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    24. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by stinky+wizzleteats · · Score: 1

      this is because Gilette Mach 3 Razor Blades are the most shoplifted item in Britain.

      Huh? You Brits don't use hemorrhoid cream? That explains a lot.

    25. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Nogami_Saeko · · Score: 1

      I usually shave in the shower after the stubble has softened nicely under warm water. Prolongs the life of the blades greatly, and the water keeps the blades nice and clean as well.

      Works great!

      N.

      --
      "Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
    26. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by HanVerspiltTijd · · Score: 1

      just an idea:

      Wouldn't sticking the blades/tag under your tinfoil hat foul reception?

    27. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      A week? Jesus christ! I use the blades for at least a month! I don't change the blades until it starts hurting to shave with the things.

      Oh, and while I'm on the topic of Gillette razor blades, can anybody explain to me why the eight pack of blades is more expensive than 2 four packs?

      Also, the razors themselves come with blades. I've never bothered to figure it out, but I suspect that it might be cheaper per blade to just buy the razor, instead of buying a 4-pack of blades. That would be terrible, treating a $10 razor like a disposable razor.

    28. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Adam9 · · Score: 1

      Or try an electric one?

    29. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Sloppy · · Score: 1
      What she told you only matters if you're pussywhipped.

      You're a man, dammit, start acting like one. The fact that you hunt to bring home the meat, and protect the cave from mountain lions, is enough to fulfill your obligation. It's a fair trade. If she's asking for more than that in exchange for her .. (ahem) relief .. you're just not negotiating hard enough. If she withholds, let her eat berries (that she has to gather, dammit -- you totally miss the point if you go gather the berries for her) instead of buffalo meat. And don't give her any new furs and skins from your kills either -- let's see a woman try to look cool in front of her friends wearing old last-year's-fashion deerskins. And when she says that she hears a large animal creeping into the cave, tell 'er you're an animal because she won't do what it takes to relax you.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    30. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by anethema · · Score: 1

      Believe it or not, it seems not thaat many people know about shaving in the shower

      Get a mirror, stick it to the shower wall.

      There is NOTHING like shaving in the shower. You will get the smoothest most comfortable shave, no razor burn, and no cuts on your face( unless you look like Taz from looney toons while you shave.)

      Try it, you wont regret it.

      --


      It's easier to fight for one's principles than to live up to them.
    31. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Danse · · Score: 1

      Actually, I do the same thing. But it still hasn't made the blades last much more than a week. Maybe it's just dependant upon coarseness of hair or something. I really don't know.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    32. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Cederic · · Score: 1


      laugh, i foil their evil plans. I've been using the same individual Mach 3 disposable blade now since March.

      They get to a certain bluntness, but then stay there for months. Still shave really well, don't cut, and don't need replacing.

      ~Cederic

    33. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by ubergeek · · Score: 1

      It used to be cheaper to get the razor because it came with a full 4 (maybe five) blades. I think they realized that people were buying the razor over and over again, so now the razor only comes with two blades. Damnit.

    34. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      I gave up on Gillette about the time they introduced Mach 3. As it was, their twin blade crap clogs quickly anyway and while better than bargain stuff, not nearly enough better.

    35. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're shaving your whole face (or rather, chin), why would you even need a mirror?

      Run a hand over your face. Where do you feel stubble? You need to shave that area.

      Simple.

    36. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I shave. And I don't get any. Here's why (I shave, not about the not getting any, although probably causal):

      My hair color is this matte black. Except when it gets dry, which it normally is, since I shower only once or twice a day. In which case, it turns a brown shade. In sunlight, some turn this rich red/auburn color.

      During this process, which takes a week or so, my beard starts to shed. I'm not talking normal hair shedding that so-called normal folks get, when some falls out. Now, this shedding really isn't a big deal. Except I work with computer hardware, a lot. And despite frequent vacuuming and having air compressors around, having beard hairs on the motherboard, modified PCI cards, etc. is a complete and utter pain. You've got to clean it up, and it frequently gets stuck on jumpers, etc.

      So I shave. I don't have hairs on my computer equipment. Customers stay happy and aren't grossed out. And I spend less time playing the paranoid type and vacuuming up everything.

      btw, I soak my razor in alcohol. My current blade has stayed "sharp" for over 8 months. The previous lasted 6. Maybe people buy razors a lot because, like some friends I have, they have really thick beards, or they aren't keeping their blades properly (most people just air drive, which leads to dulling).

    37. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by 0xA · · Score: 1

      It vey much depends on how coarse your facial hair is. I can use a Mach 3 blade for about 10 days if I shave in the shower. I have a friend who can only use one twice before it is useless. Poor bastard spends a fortune. Problem is, they work the best.

    38. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by pod · · Score: 1

      The coating used on the blades to make them sharp (titanium?) makes a very sharp edge, but wears out quickly. Your face, while not very hard, dulls edges very effectively. The blades are still sharp, relatively speaking, but not sharp enough for a smooth shave in the 'safety razor' configuration.

      Also, pay no attention to the blue strip. Mine wears out almost completely before the week is over, and the razor lasts a good couple of weeks at least.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
    39. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just fine if you don't care about your sideburns getting shorter and narrower every day until all you're left with is a fucking Mohican.

    40. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by sharkey · · Score: 1
      Does anyone else remember the Saturday Night Live parody ad from the late 70's for Mach3 razors?

      I sure don't. Silly me, I thought the Mach3's came out in the 90's. I'm hurt that they would promote the Sensor to me as "The Best a Man Can Get" more than ten years after they came out with one they claim is better.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    41. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last of the Mohican: One man's struggle against his own spastic inability to shave.

      I think:
      a) You're talking about a mohawk
      and
      b) If you can't tell the difference between the feel of a sideburn and stubble that needs shaving, you're probably not bright enough to shave in the shower without hurting yourself.

    42. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Consider the water savings as well. A good shower head will use less water than a faucet with enough pressure to clean the blade.

    43. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Turbos are even better, but they wear out quicker and cost more.

      That said, I've got an extremely close shave and my face ain't cut or sore, so I'm happy.

      But my wallet hurts. There's a reason it's called the razorblade model. :)

    44. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, uh, steam condensation?

      Do we have to get a heated mirror or something? Could we, in a shower?

      I'll stick to doing it right afterwards.

    45. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by I.A.N.A.T. · · Score: 0

      You're a moron. Seriously. Do you not understand the concept of SNL's 'commercials'? They aren't for real products that are currently out. If you comprehended the parent to your post, you would have noticed the line about the parody commercial appearing just after gillete released the Mach2, which indicates that the commercial was not for a current product. Are you stupid? Oh wait, you're posting on /., of course you are.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is the greatest country in the world doesn't mean we're superior...oh wait, yes it does.
    46. Re:Most stolen item in Britain by eckythump · · Score: 1

      Have you considered that they might get more sales of razors if they put them next to, say for instance, the milk than if they are less convenient to get at, like say, behind a counter where you have to wait in ANOTHER queue and then deal with another apathetic person blah... and that you dont even need to be a genious to figure this out. all it takes is; 1) data mining 2) click on optimize shelf placement 3) profit

  6. Don't worry by SlashdotMakesMeKool · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just shave before the checkout and you won't get caught.

    --

    1. Re:Don't worry by Trigun · · Score: 1

      They really don't like when you do that. Especially if you're wearing your bathrobe when you get down to business.

    2. Re:Don't worry by Snaller · · Score: 1

      Just shave before the checkout and you won't get caught.

      Actually you will, since you picked it up but didn't put it back... wait you did putit back? Yuuuck!

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    3. Re:Don't worry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > "My Documents" a concept invented by idiots and only supported by idiots.

      And what do /you/ call /home/username?

      Slow Down Cowboy!

      Slashdot requires you to wait 20 seconds between hitting 'reply' and submitting a comment.

      It's been 6 seconds since you hit 'reply'!

  7. Obvious problem by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Am I the only person who changes his mind when he's at a shop, and occasionally puts something back?

    Is everyone who picks something up, decides they prefer to get a 12 pack, or the cheap disposable, or whatever, going to get investigated by the police?

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    1. Re:Obvious problem by ihopman · · Score: 1

      Then there's always the people who decide they don't want to spend that much, then put it down on some random shelf in the store.

      --
      --Teach me /., I'm here to learn
    2. Re:Obvious problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe this is a way to make extra pocket money? Redistribute stock within a shop. When they challenge you at the checkout, refuse a search and proclaim your innocence (since you are). If they take it any further action, phone your lawyers and go for LOTS of money.

    3. Re:Obvious problem by dizco · · Score: 1

      They don't need to search you. If you have it on you, the RFID reader picks it up.

    4. Re:Obvious problem by dizco · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not unless you maul the package, take out the rfid chip, and hide it in your sock. If you put it back, the store knows, because hey look, the 8 pack of blades just showed up back in stock. If you put it down elsewhere, the RFID reader at the door never sees it leave, so it never sounds the alarm.

      Besides, it won't be long before they can track items anywhere in the store with RFID, at which point when you put your 8 pack of blades in with the potato chips, they'll send a stock boy out to put 'em back.

    5. Re:Obvious problem by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      That is when you sue their arses hard when they harass you at the door.

      The only language stores understand today is "I'm going to sue your ass!"

      and that crap about the cutomer is always right? and that dreamland idea of customer service....

      Ha!

      I have seen lots of people harased by the no-training no-wage no-brain store security over honest mistakes.

      and a friend recently had to sue the local chain store after the turd-security harassed his wife to tears about a forgotten bag of dogfood under the cart, when she just spent $300.00 on other items.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    6. Re:Obvious problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If they had this capability, why take the photo?

      If they do have this capability, one could have lots of fun slipping small items such as this into people's bags, or giving small children RFID stuff to play with.

      I'm also interested to know whether scanning a person for RFID tags consistutes an illegal search?

    7. Re:Obvious problem by dizco · · Score: 0

      It's really no different than the tags in books and cds and whatnot which they already have everywhere.

      I'm not a lawyer, but from my POV, i'd expect they're on LESS shaky ground if they say:

      "Excuse me sir, you set off our alarm.. It says you have a pack of unpaid-for razor blades that was recently taken off the shelf in aisle 12-B."

      -vs-

      "Excuse me sir, you set off our alarm.. Can we check your bags? It might just be a tag that didn't get disabled, or something you've got on you from some other store... but we're supposed to check anyway.. If you don't let us check, we'll have to detain you till the police get here."

      As for the cameras, I really don't know why they think they need them. But this is what RFID is for. each tag has (or should have) a unique ID. the tags generally have up to 2k (lower-case k) of storage space, which can be read/write or write-once. The cheaper ones are write-once, and they'd be more useful for this kind of stuff anyways.

    8. Re:Obvious problem by borg389 · · Score: 1

      That's pretty disgusting, especially since the checkout clerk is supposed to check there. Last summer, I had a couple of cases of soda in the cart that I'd forgotten to mention to the clerk. He didn't check. They are supposed to look though. I got out to the car and was checking the receipt (as normal) when I realized. I even went back to pay for them.

    9. Re:Obvious problem by Alan+Cox · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That is the same problem as hotel automated mini-bars, and one of the long standing ob electronic people jokes - removing all the items from the minibar then putting them all back.

      Needless to say its very hard for the manager to explain the automated bar bill that appears as a result.

      The police aren't the only problem with RFID though. If I have the RFID data for a range of products I can do several things that favour the criminal - consider a mugger sitting with a PDA zapping people going past and getting valuations on them..

      Estimated $350
      Notes:
      Take the ring, take the phone

      [OK] [CANCEL]

      Teenage kids (or bad newspapers) using RFID to obtain the colours of passing womens underwear and bra size is at least merely going to irritate rather than get people targetted.

    10. Re:Obvious problem by mkweise · · Score: 1

      The only language stores understand today is "I'm going to sue your ass!"

      Nah, the time-honored "I'll be taking my business elsewhere!" still comes acrosss just fine.

      --
      Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the War Room!
    11. Re:Obvious problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      eh, no, it doesn't. if perchance you happen to be speaking to the owner of the company it might but the average drone working at a store couldn't give a flying fuck less if you go elsewhere

    12. Re:Obvious problem by Telecommando · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I see that in stores all the time. Wouldn't it make more sense to monitor at the cash register and the exit? Then if someone walks out the door with the blades but that ID hasn't been scanned at the register they can sound the shoplifter alarm.

      --
      Beta sux! Join the Slashcott! http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=4760465&cid=46173047
    13. Re:Obvious problem by surprise_audit · · Score: 1
      Don't they zap the RFID tags once the product has been scanned? I know a lot of stores use a (presumably) generic kind of tag that trips an alarm if you try to walk out with it without paying - these are burned out in some way by swiping them over a certain area of the checkout desk. I thought that RFIDs would be neutralized in the same way, otherwise the door scanner would be useless?

      Of course, that doesn't stop someone with the PDA walking around the store pretending to shop and following a likely prospect (even using a camera phone to send a photo to an accomplice outside...), but at least it would protect you from the casual RFID-zapper on the street...

    14. Re:Obvious problem by femto · · Score: 1
      There's no motivation for the store to zap tags. It just adds and extra step (read cost) to processing their transactions. All they do is list the unique ID of that tag as 'sold' in their database.

      I wonder what happens when their sys-admin stuffs up and accidentally restores the database from yesterday's backup? Presumambly everyone who bought something yesterday gets flagged as a shoplifter next time they wear that article into the shop?

    15. Re:Obvious problem by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
      Don't they zap the RFID tags once the product has been scanned? I know a lot of stores use a (presumably) generic kind of tag that trips an alarm if you try to walk out with it without paying - these are burned out in some way by swiping them over a certain area of the checkout desk. I thought that RFIDs would be neutralized in the same way, otherwise the door scanner would be useless?
      I have no idea how flexible RFIDs are in that regard, but it wouldn't surprise me if they wanted them to continue to activate while people were walking out of the store - something more useful than the "camera taking pictures" idea is simply to look for RFIDs of things that were in inventory, haven't passed by checkout, and are walking out the door. One wonders what stops them from doing this in the first place.

      The "generic tags" thing, as I understand them, are really a very simple technology based on resonance. A coil is made of the same length as a wavelength you want to resonate and therefore reflect. When it's brought to the counter, something is done (strong magnetic field or something) that changes the coil to no longer resonate at that frequency (I don't know if it burns it out, or causes something to connect that wasn't previously, or what exactly.) While the principle isn't simple, the physical technology is, so it's cheap, but also very, very, basic.

      Of course, that doesn't stop someone with the PDA walking around the store pretending to shop and following a likely prospect (even using a camera phone to send a photo to an accomplice outside...), but at least it would protect you from the casual RFID-zapper on the street...
      My first thought on this was "Hope they deal with the crime rate then before this becomes standard". Then I thought "Heh, if they did, then there'd be no need to introduce it in the first place". Even better, if this makes shoplifting more difficult, it might even shift crime towards muggings.

      Isn't technology great?

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    16. Re:Obvious problem by Alan+Cox · · Score: 1

      They don't want to zap them. Thats loss of lots of nice information. "User is carrying CD-R disks but buys them elsewhere", "User's socks are 12 months old, suggest promo"

      Think how much easier shopping will be when the shop can tell you what you should have bought 8)

    17. Re:Obvious problem by freeweed · · Score: 1

      If you put it down elsewhere, the RFID reader at the door never sees it leave, so it never sounds the alarm.

      If the alarm *only* goes off if you leave and the door picks up the RFID, why use an RFID in the first place? This is exactly how stores prevent shoplifting today, but with simple magnetic strips.

      Does it somehow prevent shoplifting to know just *what* is being shoplifted, the minute you leave the store? I think not.

      I'm still missing why they have to snap your photo to help keep shoplifting down.

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    18. Re:Obvious problem by surprise_audit · · Score: 1
      I have no idea how flexible RFIDs are in that regard, but it wouldn't surprise me if they wanted them to continue to activate while people were walking out of the store - something more useful than the "camera taking pictures" idea is simply to look for RFIDs of things that were in inventory, haven't passed by checkout, and are walking out the door. One wonders what stops them from doing this in the first place.

      You're right - I forgot that there's literally trillions of RFIDs. You wouldn't want to zap them if the checkout computer and the door scanner are all linked together. The alarm would only sound when a tag scanned going into the store via the stockroom went out without passing the checkout. I suppose that could help keep store employees honest too - though I have no idea how much stock is "lost" each year due to employee theft...

      The next big question is, if the manufacturers achieve their goal of tagging every product on the planet, how long will it be before we reach the Y2K-equivalent of RFID tags?? I don't know how the tags are numbered, but if I was inventing it, I'd have a manufacturer part, a product-type part, and a product serial number part, any of which was not limited to a specific number of digits... Possibly a product category as well. So, a pair of Levi's would show up as "Levi-jeans-501-#123456" when converted from the raw digit form. That would probably be immune from rollover, at least in my lifetime... :)

    19. Re:Obvious problem by LostCluster · · Score: 1

      Snapping the photo earlier gives the camera watchers a heads up while the shoplifter is still in the store. If the camera shot 5 seconds after the item is picked up is the "shopper" putting the blades into their pocket, they know they've got somebody worth watching.

    20. Re:Obvious problem by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      no, and there are semi-professional shoplifters who get around them anyways, have shielded bags inside their coats & etc (they do this already).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    21. Re:Obvious problem by jovlinger · · Score: 1

      I've often wondered: on what grounds are they allowed to detain you? Am I allowed to detain random people, or do they have extra rights because they are a business? Is this some sort of citizen's arrest (which I don't even know exists, or is some myth).

    22. Re:Obvious problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they take the photos so they can "ban you from the store" just like casinos can do. the whole security team comes out of their hole in the wall and kicks your ass outta der!

    23. Re:Obvious problem by Quixadhal · · Score: 1

      So the best way to show your displeasure at RFID's is to swap the id tags on an item you intend to buy for another item you don't intend to buy. Since you're buying the item, not the tag, and since the price tag hasn't been tampered with, it seems like that should be legal (IANAL!), but very annoying.

      If they stop you at the door, they can search for the "stolen" item all they want, since they'll only find the ID tag. If they ask you about it, you can either blame it on a mislabelling (darn new technology, you guys should be more careful), or explain exactly what you did and say you don't believe the law requires that they be able to monitor and track your movements.

      Yes, of course you could just drop the tag on the floor... but that won't really accomplish much other than show a discrepency between the inventory system and the cashier system.

    24. Re:Obvious problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the size of the number is big enough that you could come close to labeling evey atom in the known universe. Also, the tags have around 2k of memory. 2^2048 is a huge number of states (ie. unique IDs).

    25. Re:Obvious problem by stephenbooth · · Score: 1

      I don't know about the US but here in the UK, unless martial law has been declared, the only people who can legally detain you against your will are:

      • Police officers
      • Certain Nurses
      • Doctors (i.e. MDs, not PhDs)
      • Magistrates and Judges
      • Persons acting on specific written, signed and autheticated instructions from the above who are legally considered to be acting as their agents

      If a security guard or other store personnel asks you to not leave the store they can only do so with your consent (i.e. they can ask you to not leave the store but cannot compel you). However, if you do leave they will be justified in calling the police and if arrested and found to be innocent you have no legal recourse to sue them unless you can show some contributory crime (e.g. this is the second time in a week they've called the police on you without justification). If they do try to prevent you from leaving and make any kind of physical contact with you at all then you can legally view that as an assault and respond under the UK's self defence laws which entitle you to use any reasonable force (undefined but usually taken to mean any level of force upto and including the level used against you or the minimum necessary to cause them to brerak off the assault, which ever is greater, so you can't hit them if all they've done is put their hand on your arm but if they then grip your arm you are entitled to prise their fingers off (or toehrwise break the hold) and if you break one of their fingers or their wrist in the process well tough on them).

      A few months ago the alarms went off as I was leaving a store. I was stopped by the store deputy manager but pointed out that they hadn't gone off when i walked through but rather when the 3 teenagers in front of me had run out. I waved my bags through the sensors and demonstrated that the alarms didn't go off from them. He said that he still wanted to check my bags, as I had a large number of bags and was pissed off at the time I again demonstrated that none of my bags set off the alarms. At this point he grabbed my arm so I asked him to let go pointing out that it was assault. He tightened his grip so I dropped the bags and used a rolling throw to break his grip and put him face down on the floor. A police officer who had been a few yards away and had both seen and heard the exchange walked over. The store deputy manager stood up and demanded, screamed, that the police officer arrest me. I calmly recounted what had happened and again demonstrated that it wasn't my bags that had set off the alarm. The police officer arrested the store deputy manager on charges of assault. At the magistrates court it transpired that this particular guy was well known for misidentifying shop lifters and hassling innocent shoppers, in fact he had been warned about it a number of times by the store manager and had been told not to go on door security but restrict himself to the back of the store. He lost his job and was sentenced to 6 months for unlawful detention and assault. I got 50 pounds worth of vouchers from the store and an apology from the store manager and the regional manager for the group.

      Stephen

      --
      "Don't write down to your readers, the only people less intelligent than you can't read" - Sign on Newspaper Office Wall
    26. Re:Obvious problem by dizco · · Score: 0

      Except, the tag probably will be used for the price, and the tags eventually won't be on the outside of the package, but installed somewhere inside, at the point of manufacture.

    27. Re:Obvious problem by I.A.N.A.T. · · Score: 0

      I've often wondered: on what grounds are they allowed to detain you?

      They aren't. You can walk out the door and keep on going, and unless there's a cop handy you're off scott free. Of course, they don't want you to know this, so they will threaten you and may even grab you, at which point they have exceeded their legal rights and have committed assault. We always see on tv the heroic bystander tripping the fleeing pickpocket or purse-snatcher, but in reality people doing that could be arrested themselves for assault, excepting the one (or few, my memory is bad) place(s) here in the US where you are required by law to attempt to stop any non-violent crime. (a la the seinfeld series finale)

      --
      Just because the U.S. is the greatest country in the world doesn't mean we're superior...oh wait, yes it does.
    28. Re:Obvious problem by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      OK, but it would still make a certain amount of sense to organise the tags into some kind of grouping to make it easier to search the known universe for any given tag...

  8. There's the end of shopping with your SO by SWroclawski · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Suddently splitting up and asking your significant other to pick something up for you in a different part of a store warrants a crime.

    - Serge Wroclawski

    1. Re:There's the end of shopping with your SO by Trigun · · Score: 1

      Just make sure you pick up the blades. It'll embarass her so much that she'll never take you shopping again. If you getting arrested doesn't work, there's always shopping for other people.

      I speak from experience. I never have to shop anymore.

    2. Re:There's the end of shopping with your SO by drzhivago · · Score: 1

      No it doesn't. If they see a discrepancy, they have all those other cameras recording video to catch the exchange of blades from your SO to you.

    3. Re:There's the end of shopping with your SO by GammaTau · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Suddently splitting up and asking your significant other to pick something up for you in a different part of a store warrants a crime.

      The thing is, it doesn't. If they build a technical mechanism to catch shoplifters and that mechanism isn't reliable, it's not your problem. "Crime" is a concept defined by law, not technology.

      Sure, they might not want to give you this impression, but it's their responsibility to prove that you are guilty of something and if their technology can't give enough proof, the technology is nothing more but a way to scare people. Picking something from a shelf may be proof in some cases, in some cases it isn't.

      If you know that you've not stolen anything (which should be rather easy to know...), stand up for your rights if you're accused of something.

    4. Re:There's the end of shopping with your SO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, so once you pick up blades, cameras all over the store will follow your every move...?

      Although that isn't how I understood it to work, basically it just picks up on who takes the product off the shelf and who walks out with it.

    5. Re:There's the end of shopping with your SO by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      Anyone want to hazard a guess as to how store security would react if you held up (or wore) one of those rubber politician masks while picking up the Mach3s? "Hmm, Nixon's shopping for Mach3s... Isn't he dead?"

    6. Re:There's the end of shopping with your SO by drzhivago · · Score: 1

      The cameras all over the store aren't specifically tracking anyone, but trained security can use the shots to effectively follow people as they move through the store.

      And yes, they are sometimes used to follow pretty girls.

    7. Re:There's the end of shopping with your SO by freeweed · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you know that you've not stolen anything (which should be rather easy to know...), stand up for your rights if you're accused of something.

      Yeah, because people are never wrongfully accused, or convicted, based on incomplete or even entirely false evidence.

      Personally, I can't afford the legal fees I'd need just to be able to shop in the UK. I take things off shelves all the time and put them back in the wrong place.

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    8. Re:There's the end of shopping with your SO by Jett · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Have you or anyone you know personally ever been accused of shoplifting? Two friends of mine were in an upscale grocery store not that long ago, the one who was doing the shopping was hungry so she picked up a piece of focacia bread and ate it as she shopped. By the time they got to check-out an hour later they had forgotten about the bread. An off-duty cop who was acting as a security guard came down from the camera room and started yelling at them, rifling through their things and generally making a big scene. Eventually he led them up to an interogation room where they spent several hours being repeatedly searched and berated for being criminal scum. All because this one guy watched one of them eat a piece of bread on the store's CCTV and then forget to pay for it an hour later when they checked-out. It would of been much easier to just ask her to pay for it. Even though only one of them was actually shopping and she was the one who ate the bread and forgot to pay for it, they are now both banned from the store. If either of them are spotted in it again (or even in the parking lot) they will be arrested.

      My point is that crime is often defined by the individual responsible for stopping it, and if that person is an asshole they can do whatever they want. Adding these kinds of technologies into the mix is problamatic because it seems there are serious flaws (e.g. the involvement of a third-party), combine this with the arbitrary and absolute power often given to the enforcers of security and you have a recipe for even more honest mistakes being treated as crimes, and more false positives. Ultimately these sorts of things are bad for business, not to mention the civil liberty implications of having databases out there which contain detailed purchase records. I have no doubt at all that these databases would be prime targets for governments with an unhealthy interest in the details of their citizens lives. It's bad enough private entities have this sort of information, I certainly don't want governments to have it.

    9. Re:There's the end of shopping with your SO by Wolfger · · Score: 1

      I'm tempted to go take a pack of razor blades and deposit it on a shelf in another department. Or in somebody else's cart when they aren't looking.

    10. Re:There's the end of shopping with your SO by cyril3 · · Score: 1
      Watch how quickly 'Disturbing a Retail Display' becomes a offence under the DCMA as an attempt to subvert the use of manufacturers electronic device.

      Once you take it out of the display you better buy it or you have some explaining to do at the checkout to the nice security man.

      At least it might stop those freeloaders who take food and give it to their kids to shut them up while they are shopping. There would be a higher payback and less false positives if they just arrested anyone with children who are seen eating or drinking inside the store.

  9. well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I, for one, welcome our new razor blade overlords!

    1. Re:well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ....and with a cutting remark, too !

  10. Simple solution by BabyDave · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When you go shopping, always have an accomplice - (s)he picks up the blades, hands them to you somewhere else in the store, and you take them to the checkout.

    Of course, this would happen 'accidentally' quite often anyway, but it's always good to make more trouble for stupid schemes like this.

    1. Re:Simple solution by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I have a better idea. Find a hat, sunglasses, and a scarf in the store. Put them all on, and pick up the razors. Then put the stuff back (or don't) and go to the checkout.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Simple solution by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      In my family - and I live in the UK and shop at Tescos (sometimes), its normal for one person to push the trolley op the main aisle carrying a shopping list, while another - or possibly several kids - goes to the shelves and collectsd individual items. It is not normal to BUY Gillette blade however - they are so expensive that no normal person would buy them - hardly surprising that the majority are shoplifted!

      Maybe if they dropped the price, they would get more sales and less theft! - and it would save the cost of all those RFID tags and video cameras. Technology wont fix a flawed business plan.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    3. Re:Simple solution by dakryx · · Score: 0

      You know what the killer is though? That some accountant has figured that even though they loose a large ammount of money from shoplifting, they still make a larger ammount of money selling at exorbant prices. Rather than lowewing the cost and in turn lowering shoplifting rates.

  11. RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'nuff said

  12. PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by Dark+Lord+Seth · · Score: 3, Funny

    So, what would happen if we round up 30+ slashdotters and have all of them pillage the rack of razor blades, only to put them all back and pillage some more? You know, with a bunch of beach balls and a large amount of beer we could have a great time while pillaging razorblades!

    1. Re:PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      actually, cince it's triggering on a event... simply standing there and taking the blades, putting them back and taking them again.. would produce tons of pictures.

      and yes, screwing with them making the "tactic" a pain in the arse is the best way of getting rid of it.

      Kinda like when at work they went sweeping for 802.11 access points. they discovered 10,000 of them in my office alone :-) funny I wonder who was running that access-point spoofer generating all those bogus beacons.... oh well...

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by Tim+Browse · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When I was at Uni, the library had tags in all the book spines that were 'neutralised' when you checked out a book. If you tried to walk out of the library with a book you weren't supposed to, the turnstiles would notice, and lock.

      Fair enough - a good system. Except, students being students thought up a joke which I'm sure has been tried everywhere in the world such schemes exist - you rip the tag out of a book and drop it in the bag of your 'friend' when they're not looking.

      Then when they stroll out through the turnstiles, they double up over the now locked turnstile and have to turn out their bag for the guy on the gates.

      Now, given these RFID tags are so small and unobtrusive, and as one of the sellers in that article notes that no-one has called to ask what the tags are doing in their razor blades, I wonder how stores would cope with RFID DOS raids - customers go in and start slipping RFIDs into boxes, etc, to screw up the store's processes, hassle the wrong people, etc.

      I mean, if you don't want the stores to use them, make it a disadvantage for them to use them :)

      Just an idle thought.

    3. Re:PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2, Interesting
      So, what would happen if we round up 30+ slashdotters and have all of them pillage the rack of razor blades, only to put them all back and pillage some more?

      Well, I'm pretty sure I know at least a dozen other /. readers in Cambridge besides myself. ;-)

      It's a shame Tesco shut five minutes ago. Might have been fun to print out this article and the various comments posted on it, and go have a word with their manager...

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    4. Re:PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by keesh · · Score: 1

      Kinda like when at work they went sweeping for 802.11 access points. they discovered 10,000 of them in my office alone :-) funny I wonder who was running that access-point spoofer generating all those bogus beacons.... oh well...

      They should have fired you for that. Security policies exist for several very good reasons.

    5. Re:PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you could print out a bunch of fake barcodes and stick them over a bunch of existing barcodes too. what's your point? (chances are, they'll catch you doing the thing you were talking about, if they were smart enough to have an RFID reader at the front entrance. cameras can catch you too, you know.)

    6. Re:PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by Tim+Browse · · Score: 1
      if they were smart enough to have an RFID reader at the front entrance

      Hmmm...that raises an interesting point. I thought RFIDs were designed to be persistent - i.e. they still work when you leave the store (prompting visions of dystopian customer tracking etc). If that is the case, they couldn't have an RFID reader at the front entrance that did anything particularly useful (e.g. set off alarms), because it would be going off all the time.

      Similarly for an RFID reader at the exit, interestingly, which is more likely where they would want to put one. Maybe they do have a 'kill' function that has the same effect as when stores disable those metal tags they use at the moment for CDs, etc.

      Anyway, my point was that it was just an idle thought, poorly conceived and thought through.

      You're new here, aren't you? :-)

    7. Re:PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great! Would be sort of slashdoting the rack of razor blades

    8. Re:PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey we have nearly thirty /. readers in my office, just across the road from Tesco in Cambridge! I think our usual lunchtime visit will be ...ahem... quite entertaining tomorrow :-)

    9. Re:PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just like they shuold fire you for the fart smell in the board room.... dammit they KNEW it was you....

      Get a clue you IT idiot.

      99.997% of the time Corperate IT is idiotic. local policies changed to make the Regional VP happy while still secure make more sense...

      and it's up to Local IT to foil the idiots and morons from corperate.

    10. Re:PILLAGE AND PLUNDER! by Captain+Large+Face · · Score: 1

      We used to do this at my university too, although the barriers would let off a (reasonably) loud alarm instead. It was much fun to slip a small book into someone's rucksack and see them to red in the face when the alarm sounds. :)

  13. They are... by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

    Seriously... I shave sometimes with a razor, sometimes with an electric shaver. The Mach3 blades cost something on the order of about 15 USD for five. (Or at least that is what I pay here in Switzerland). It is totally outrageous. Talk about a monopoly!

    The worst part is that I tried to downgrade to a cheaper shaver. It seems that they not as good and do not hold as long...

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    1. Re:They are... by Martin+Blank · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Pack of four costs me US$8, pack of eight costs US$12.

      When they're in stock. And they *are* placed at the checkout lines (though at the Ralph's where I shop, they're out so you don't have to ask for them, provided there are any left in stock), which has reduced shoplifting but the damned things are so popular that I've taken to shopping for the eight packs when I can and looking for replacements when I start in on the second cartridge of four.

      The Mach3 has got to be one of the best examples of taking a common product and making a seemingly simple change that makes the product indispensible overnight. I picked one up a few months after they came out, and I can't believe I used to put up with other razors. Now if I use a normal two-blade razor, even one of the better ones, I tend to see shaving nicks all over the place. I know of a lot of women that use the Mach3 (or its successor for women, the Venus3) as well because it's less likely to leave nicks on their legs and under their arms.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    2. Re:They are... by gilroy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Blockquoth the poster:

      The worst part is that I tried to downgrade to a cheaper shaver. It seems that they not as good and do not hold as long...

      The funny thing is, this is preceded by

      It is totally outrageous. Talk about a monopoly!

      Of course, these statements are essentially contradictory. Obviously Gillette does not have a monopoly, because there exist alternatives. They apparently offer a superior product, but at a higher cost. The whole point of the free market is, you get to choose what you pay for. If the cheaper blades were as good, people would move to that system and Gillette's price would come down.


      Are you alleging that Gillette somehow uses its market presence to squeeze out the other players?


      Not every high price indicates the boogey-man of "monopoly". Higher quality sometimes demands higher price.

    3. Re:They are... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use the cheap Wilkinson throwaways, shave just as good as expensive razors. Seems I'm not paying the ad costs this way. Production costs for razors are negligible. Machines that fit into a normal room churn out thousands per hour.

    4. Re:They are... by Talez · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Higher quality sometimes demands higher price.

      Damn straight. After using the Mach3, going back to ordinary razors just didn't cut it.

    5. Re:They are... by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      What I am alleging is that the shaving companies have a conspiracy and setup a nice and neat monopoly.

      You pay less you get less blades. It does not matter who you go to, but the price factor is the same.

      It is like shaving cream. There are like X varieties and they are are all about same price per quanity (+-20%). That is a monopoly...

      Sadly these days most of the multi-nationals seem to have setup monopolies. Music, Movies, etc, etc...

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    6. Re:They are... by mike300zx · · Score: 2, Funny

      literally!

    7. Re:They are... by MrLint · · Score: 1

      Also remember that these razors are a few grams of steel and a few ounces of plastic. At 3 bucks each they are like making something like 12000% profit.

    8. Re:They are... by SpacePunk · · Score: 1

      "It is like shaving cream. There are like X varieties and they are are all about same price per quanity (+-20%). That is a monopoly..."

      No, it's called "price fixing". which, incidentally, is also illegal.

    9. Re:They are... by NoData · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What I am alleging is that the shaving companies have a conspiracy and setup a nice and neat monopoly.

      No, what you are referring to is not a monopoly, but a cartel, where competitors collude to fix prices and, sometimes supply.

      I kinda doubt this is happening, but I do agree the prices are exorbitant. But damn, how ironclad are the patents on the Mach series blades? Why doesn't somebody reverse-engineer these baddies and put up some competition? I did try a storebrand work-alike of the older Gillette line (it was a Sensor generic designed for the Sensor stick) and it was AWFUL. Bloody mess.

    10. Re:They are... by PsibrII · · Score: 1

      It must be some odd quirk, maybe the Tim Allen factor, but there's really no good reason to spend large amounts of cash on shaving products. $2 for a bag of disposable razors, $3-4 for some shaving gel, that should do for at least 4-5 months unless you are some sort of yetti.

      Electric shavers cost a fat chunk of change, $50-80 for basic ones,$10-$30 for bagain basement chinese specials, but seem to save a lot of time. You can even touch up with a cheap razor if you are a total nut about it.

      But using a razor with 3 blades that costs neerly what an electric shaver does, come on !

    11. Re:They are... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Of course, these statements are essentially contradictory."

      In the US, no, they are not.

      As Bork I believe argued (slashdot had an article on it bac in the day) re the MS case, the US letter of the law and case law clearly define what a monopoly is. You can own 100% of a market in a certain area and NOT be a monopoly under the law. Likewise, you can own 90% or so, and be considered a monopoly. All depending the rules.

      You can read his analysis himself if you wish to further understand this (as well as correct any errors I've made during my recall).

      "Are you alleging that Gillette somehow uses its market presence to squeeze out the other players?"

      That is a far better question to be asking than simply stating that available choice means a monopoly does not exist. Clearly, in the MS case, MS was found to be a monopoly in the OS business, despite other software competitors and even other OSs, such as Apple's OS.

    12. Re:They are... by NoData · · Score: 1


      It's not the Tim Allen factor, it's the Bright Red Sprinkler factor. My mug is sensitive, I guess. I've tried the cheap-o razors, trust me. It was brutal. I've even had two GOOD electric razor. They don't nick, but me give the razor rash like nobody's business. The Mach3 and Mach3 Turbo are the only ones I find that treat my face nicely...the Sensor was OK, but the Sensor Excel? EVIL!...and even just the right blades, I have to shave in the shower so my bristles get sufficiently soft and water-logged.

      But..uhm..yeah..maybe that's TMI.

    13. Re:They are... by cyril3 · · Score: 1
      > You pay less you get less blades

      What the hell did you expect.

      There are like X varieties and they are are all about same price per quanity (+-20%). That is a monopoly...

      No, that's competition.

      It would only be monopoly ( or industry wide price fixing ) if all the shaving cream manufacturers got together and decided that prices should be $x+or-20%. Given that soap ina can can be manufacturered anywhere by any number of companies it would be difficult to see them all getting together and setting prices that they could trust all to honour.

      If your pricing information is correct, all the current prices prove is that consumers won't pay more than a 20% premium for whatever added special softening or smoothing or smelling ingredients one manuf might put in their can over the base grade chinese foamy soap in a can. Which sounds about right.p

    14. Re:They are... by camusflage · · Score: 1
      Why doesn't somebody reverse-engineer these baddies and put up some competition?
      Somehow, someway, Gillette would use the DMCA to quash whatever competition there is.

      Seriously though, it's a razor, not a CPU. It's not like it would be terribly difficult to "reverse engineer" the thing.
      --
      The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
    15. Re:They are... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you alleging that Gillette somehow uses its market presence to squeeze out the other players?

      In some countries, at least, the other players ARE Gillette. Essentially, the one company sells several seemingly-different products under different names, but ultimately the money all ends up in the same place. It's entirely possible for there to be a monopoly (or oligopoly) while at the same time consumers _think_ they have a wide choice.

      The problem here, of course, is that while the monopolist can set up a 'range' catering to different price ranges/market segments, the total amount consumers spend can be higher than if there was _actual_ competition in the market, not just a happy coexistence of "different" brands.

    16. Re:They are... by daveisoverlord · · Score: 2, Funny

      After using the Mach3, going back to ordinary razors just didn't cut it.

      I wish there was a +1 Rimshot mod. :)

      --
      The perception of reality is more important than reality itself.
    17. Re:They are... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > I wish there was a +1 Rimshot mod. :)

      There is, it's called "Funny"

    18. Re:They are... by I.A.N.A.T. · · Score: 0

      But..uhm..yeah..maybe that's TMI.

      Depends on what you're shaving.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is the greatest country in the world doesn't mean we're superior...oh wait, yes it does.
    19. Re:They are... by StrongGlad · · Score: 1

      There is a triple-blade alternative...

      I used to use the Mach 3s exclusively, until I became entirely fed up with the stores running out of stock, hiding them in the pharmacy (which was only open during limited hours), etc.

      At that point, I decided to give Shick's rendition of the 3-blade razor a try. Unlike the Mach 3s, the entire razor is disposable (not just the blade). I find that I actually prefer the Shick to the Mach 3, and I believe they're about the same price.

  14. I wonder what.... by BeninOcala · · Score: 1

    I wonder what the price of those razorblades are....$19.84 euro? hmm...

    --
    Where ever you go, there you are.
    1. Re:I wonder what.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up!! He's HILARIOUS!!

  15. Not just for tagging consumers' clothes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    These RF tags are perfect for tagging clothes, as the blurb pointed out. But an even more sinister use than tagging clothes is tagging the people who wear the clothes. And I'm especially referring to a certain kind of person:

    Slavery is alive and well in this country, and I'm not referring merely to rhetorical or political slavery, but actual slavery. Women from foreign countries, particularly southeast-Asian countries are flown to America and promised low-paying but normal jobs performing menial labor or housecleaning services, but when they arrive, they discover to their horror that the real purpose is to prostitute themselves for the financial benefit of their masters. These women (and even children) are trapped, since they don't speak English, don't have the money to fly home, and don't have the physical or mental stamina to escape their tormentors after so much abuse.

    How is this relevant to RF tags? Think of how much easier it would be to kidnap people from airports if all you needed to do was wander around with a small device, picking up the signals from the tags embedded in clothing given to the erstwhile immigrants back in their home countries. No longer would there have to be complicated networks of international communication -- they'd just have to agree on a certain range of serial numbers (of which there are trillions, as the article points out), hand out "free" clothes to people boarding the plane at departure, and sit back while agents at the US airports haul in the "goods".

    This never would've been possible if we'd stuck to normal barcodes -- it's simply impossible to read barcodes surreptitiously. And since criminals are always the first to adopt new technologies for these devious purposes, it's only a matter of time before it comes to an airport near you, Thirteenth Amendment be damned.

  16. Unfortunately... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This strategy has more holes than one's face after using these particular blades.

  17. Reuse them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The price is outrageous. That's why I have been re-using the same blades for the past few months. Besides being dull is there any potential danger in reusing these? I'm sure the razor companies will say there is since they want you to buy more of their ridiculously priced razors.

    1. Re:Reuse them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I caught hepatitis from using the same blades too long. No, nobody else had used the blades. Apparently, used blades, especially when pitted from frequent use, just make a terrific breeding ground for airborne hepatitis. I only have hepatitis B, so it could be worse, though.

    2. Re:Reuse them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn - is that true? I didn't know that. That sucks. I guess it's back to no shaving for me!

    3. Re:Reuse them by balloonhead · · Score: 1

      No, it's a complete load of shite. Anyway, Hep B is a real bastard. Hep A is the one that's not too bad, usually oral transmission (faecal-oral to give it its proper term). Hep B and C are blood/body fluid borne, no chance of getting them airborne.

      --
      This idea was invented by Shampoo.
    4. Re:Reuse them by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I'd just get a bottle of isopropyl alcohol and rinse the blades off with it after you use them. Isopropyl is cheap, certainly much cheaper than replacing blades all the time.

      Or just get an electric.

  18. Hmm.. by CashCarSTAR · · Score: 1

    I was unsure of RFIDs, to be honest, I did not know the technical capabilities of them.

    All I can say is..

    Wow..

    Not necessarly a good wow, it is rather impressive 'tho..in a Klez kind of way. I do not think that this is TOO much of a worry as is, at least in this case.

    But the technical potential?

    wow.

  19. If I worked at one of these stores... by RyanFenton · · Score: 1


    I know EXACTLY where I'd put the price sticker when I was walking by with a sticker gun.

    Any other fun non-destructive vandelism/protest ideas?

    Ryan Fenton

    1. Re:If I worked at one of these stores... by dizco · · Score: 1

      Where? Either I don't get it (entirely possible, i'm on my first cup of coffee, and full of cold meds), or you don't understand what the "RF" part of "RFID" means.

    2. Re:If I worked at one of these stores... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Where? Either I don't get it (entirely possible, i'm on my first cup of coffee, and full of cold meds),
      You don't get it. What the parent poster was trying to say is that he'd be putting price stickers on his penis, right there in front of the CCTV camera. That's why he doesn't work at one of those stores, he got fired for repeated mis-application of pricing stickers.
    3. Re:If I worked at one of these stores... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure. Scotch-tape a piece of string to the razor blades as they sit on the shelf. Back off out of camera range and reel in your prize. Take it to the register and watch the expression on their face. Tell them "Sorry, I don't show up on film; it's a medical condition."

    4. Re:If I worked at one of these stores... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about customers wear a baseball cap with an X-10 cam mounted on the brim with plenty of blinkenlights, and a label on the hat that says "Video taping in progress."

    5. Re:If I worked at one of these stores... by RyanFenton · · Score: 1

      The RFID tags, when moved, trigger the camera on the razor blade display to start recording images. The place to put the sticker then, is on the lens of camera making the recordings. Extra fun comes when someone cleaning has to decide if it's worth opening a pack to get a razor to scratch off the sticker goo.

      Ryan Fenton

    6. Re:If I worked at one of these stores... by dizco · · Score: 0

      Ah, that makes a lot more sense. Ok, so the next step is an RFID chip in the price tagger, which triggers the camera. or have the camera monitor constantly, keeping a backlog of 1 day or so, so that they have video of the vandalism. That'd probably work better and be less exploitable, but the RFID in the price gun would be more fun to implement.

    7. Re:If I worked at one of these stores... by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a good way to get a wooden stake through your heart. Watch the expression on their face when you don't turn to dust.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  20. Technological approach again by BenjyD · · Score: 5, Insightful

    [This trial] is not to do with security or theft, it is a supply chain trial."

    But they then say security staff use it. So what is it for? What supply chain information does it give them that they can't get from the till receipts?

    My local supermarket (Safeways, Shepherds Bush) had huge shoplifting problems with razor blades. Rather than implementing this (presumably expensive) scheme, they took the simple step of moving the blades behind the counter at the store pharmacy. Shoplifting drops overnight, no added cost and no privacy concerns.

    1. Re:Technological approach again by Masloki · · Score: 1
      "they took the simple step of moving the blades behind the counter at the store pharmacy. Shoplifting drops overnight, no added cost and no privacy concerns."

      Not quite 'no added cost'. The profit on that item just dropped because another employee must handle it before the customer can purchase it.

      In this case, putting it at the store pharmacy is a pretty bad idea, as those store employees are paid at a higher rate than other employees, such as the customer service desk or photo department. Especially at slower stores where there is only a pharmacist, no technicians, you now have an employee making 100k/year acting as a cashier.

      --
      Sig-"Out beyond fields of wrongdoing and rightdoing, there is a field. I will meet you there." Jelaluddin Rumi
    2. Re:Technological approach again by BenjyD · · Score: 1

      I somehow doubt the person behind the counter earns 100k/year. More like 20k. They're not exactly highly trained. Perhaps pharmacy was the wrong term to use - you couldn't get prescriptions filled there, but you could buy Clarityn.

    3. Re:Technological approach again by twelveinchbrain · · Score: 1

      What is it for? The part of the supply chain you don't see. Unpack the products, put them on the shelves, and your inventory is automatically updated.

      --
      Not Found
      The requested URL /signature.html was not found on this server.
    4. Re:Technological approach again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That other employee that must handle it before the customer can purchase it is called a cashier and that person ALREADY handles the item before the customer can purchase it.

    5. Re:Technological approach again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My local supermarket (Safeways, Shepherds Bush) had huge shoplifting problems with razor blades. Rather than implementing this (presumably expensive) scheme, they took the simple step of moving the blades behind the counter at the store pharmacy. Shoplifting drops overnight, no added cost and no privacy concerns.

      Right. So now another product is the focus of shoplifting. Let's say Chocolate Hobnobs. So they move that behind the counter too? And then aerosol cans are the most shoplifted item (for their NO2 content, naturally). Oh well, let's enlarge the counter and shift those items behind it too.

      Pretty soon you're running a supermarket that resembles a library, pissing off the regular, honest customers, and not really preventing theft.

      Not that I think snapping pictures of everyone who picks up an item is a particularly logical alternative either...

    6. Re:Technological approach again by tree_frog · · Score: 1
      Yeah, but this is a bastard. I go to the supermarket in the evening when the pharmacy counter is shut, so I find it hard to buy razor blades.

      And I don't want to look like RMS!

      regards, treefrog

    7. Re:Technological approach again by Ibix · · Score: 1

      That store used to have a set of barcodes for each of the razors at the checkout. You asked for a pack of 5 mach-3s or whatever, they scanned the barcode, you paid, then you went to the customer service desk where they scribbled on your receipt and gave you your razors.

      Incidentally, I once saw the guy who had been infront of me in the queue (buying razors, amongst other things) complaining to customer service about how irritating the checkout guy had been. Never saw that particular guy doing anything except collecting baskets the rest of the time I lived there...

      I

  21. Why ? by Krapangor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For preventing theft, the RFID tag would be enough alone.
    So why do they need the photos for ?
    Marketing ? But for customer group identification one photo would be sufficient.

    --
    Owner of a Mensa membership card.
    1. Re:Why ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > For preventing theft, the RFID tag would be enough alone.

      No. The RFID will only tell you that some specific blades are missing.

      > So why do they need the photos for ?

      So, at the end of the day, they can know _who_ took the missing blades.

    2. Re:Why ? by Krapangor · · Score: 1

      Well you just add RFID scanners at the doors. Coupled with the cashier system you'll notice when some unpayed blades walk out of the shop.
      This solution is used in most larger stores in Germany for more expensive goods already. In fact, it has been used for the last 10 years (or even more).
      On the other hand it might be as well that the Germans are much more clever and 10 years ahead of everybody.

      --
      Owner of a Mensa membership card.
    3. Re:Why ? by DocScience · · Score: 1

      The in-store theft anticipation system has nothing to do with marketing or identification of shoppers (pretty tough to do with store cameras anyway). Why would Gillette need a tag to ID shoppers when they could much easier link a credit card or shopper card to the purchase at the checkout? Razor blades are often stolen by professionals as they are easily sold for cash (often to other retailers). As such, the theives often use shielded bags to thwart the tag's RF anti-theft function. Not to mention runners and employee assisted theft where conventional anti-theft tags are next to useless. The smart shelf theft anticipation technology is about the only way to detect theft short of placing a guard at the razors.

    4. Re:Why ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. But there would be no video camera with this setup.

  22. What if you take it back later? by arcanumas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't know how it is set up, but does it also take your picture if you put it back later? Otherwise the picture on the checkout will register you as a thief..
    God , i would love to be able to make trouble about that. If you live in England , try it and if they mark you as a thief then unleash all your fury. (and i don't mean "Slashdot reader mode" fury. i mean "Quake 3 mayhem mode" fury).

    --
    Slashdot Sig. version 0.1alpha. Use at your own risk.
    1. Re:What if you take it back later? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Otherwise the picture on the checkout will register you as a thief..

      Damn, people are dense today.

      The cashier don't care about the picture.

      But, if a specif blade was removed from the shelf and not paid for, then they would know who did it.

    2. Re:What if you take it back later? by Trigun · · Score: 1

      Bring all your friends and hand off the package a million different times. Then dump it in the produce aisle. Then do it again, and again, and again. Then have everyone buy a stick of gum and walk out.
      See how good their cctv really is.

    3. Re:What if you take it back later? by FurryFeet · · Score: 1

      (and i don't mean "Slashdot reader mode" fury. i mean "Quake 3 mayhem mode" fury).

      Dou you mean I should click furiously in my mouse button while I bunny-hop around them and scream "You suck, lam4r"?
      Oh, well. It's still better that the "Slashdot reader mode fury", where you simply "(-1, Troll)" them.

  23. Scenario by Compact+Dick · · Score: 4, Interesting
    • Customer #1 picks up a pack of Gillettes.
    • Customer #1 decides against buying it while in the cereal aisle, dumps it there.
    • Customer #2, also in the cereal aisle, decides to get a pack of Gillettes, spots the rogue pack, picks it up.
    • Both proceed to their respective checkouts...

    • What happens now?
    1. Re:Scenario by sql*kitten · · Score: 2, Informative

      What happens now?

      If you read the article, you'd know the whole thing is supervised by human operators. It isn't a case that a machine automatically matches faces and raises an alarm. Presumably one of them would simply ask.

    2. Re:Scenario by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > What happens now?

      Nothing. The blade was picked up, and the blade was paid, so they don't care.

      The bad scenario is:

      > * Customer #1 picks up a pack of Gillettes.
      > * Customer #1 decides against buying it while in the cereal aisle, dumps it there.

      Then, customer #1 leave and return one week after. He took a razor blade that was not paid for, he is now suspect of shoplifting.

      And, in those days of corporate goverance, suspicion of fraud mean guilt.

    3. Re:Scenario by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I was stealing it, would I tell them I'm stealing it because they asked me? More to the point, would they believe me if I said I did not steal it without scanning me for RFID?

    4. Re:Scenario by Nimey · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Customer #1 decides against buying it while in the cereal aisle, dumps it there.
      ...
      What happens now?
      Customer #1 gets rightfully punished. I hated that when I worked in a grocery store. The worst thing was the wankers who would decide they didn't want a cut of meat, then drop it any old place to warm up and become unfit for consumption.

      I know, your time is valuable, blah blah blah, but it's damned rude and inconsiderate.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    5. Re:Scenario by roystgnr · · Score: 4, Funny

      If you read the article, you'd know the whole thing is supervised by human operators. It isn't a case that a machine automatically matches faces and raises an alarm.

      Well, even if you didn't read the article, you've got to realize that there will be a human in the loop somewhere. We aren't quite up to replacing security guards with ED-209 yet.

      Robot: "HALT. PRESENT RECEIPT. YOU HAVE TEN SECONDS TO COMPLY."
      Customer: "It's right here."
      Robot: "YOU NOW HAVE FIVE SECONDS TO COMPLY."
      Customer: "It... It's right here!"
      Robot: "3...2...1... I AM NOW AUTHORIZED TO PREVENT SHOPLIFTING WITH PHYSICAL FORCE." (gatling guns spin up)
      Customer: "Aaahhh!!!"

    6. Re:Scenario by Ella+the+Cat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It infuriates me as a customer to see people dumping stuff back on shelves like that, especially perishables. But someone making such a protest with non-perishable razor blades isn't being inconsiderate (and neither person is committing a crime AFAIK). You would punish protesting customers for the sins of the inconsiderate ones. Stores would trash our privacy to punish shoplifters.

      The road to hell is paved with good intentions

    7. Re:Scenario by Archon-X · · Score: 1

      ever notice that it's always the cereal aisle? ..like there *no other places* to dump your stuff.

      Guess razors in your cornflakes would get you up and going in the morning :/

    8. Re:Scenario by camusflage · · Score: 1

      We're talking razor blades, not meat. Unless the Mach 3 is significantly more (or less, depending upon your take) advanced than I'd believe it to be, I don't think setting it down elsewhere diminishes its qualities in any way.

      --
      The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
  24. Very concerned by acxr+is+wasted · · Score: 1

    My privacy has been seriously compromised. I go through two Mach3 Turbo blades a week. I'm what you'd call "very hairy."

    --
    "Come on, let's go drink till we can't feel feelings anymore."
    1. Re:Very concerned by Trigun · · Score: 1

      Ahh, the furries must love you.

    2. Re:Very concerned by Chronowerx · · Score: 1

      I just feel sorry for Robin Williams...

    3. Re:Very concerned by Drakin · · Score: 1

      Just grow out all that hair... nobody would recognise you, and you'd likely be missidentified as bigfoot anyway.

  25. Cigarettes by afternoon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You have to wonder why they don't just put them behind the counter, as with cigarettes.

    Is it some kind of subtle lure? Do they fear the drop in sales resulting from the less control of POS presentation? How would that stack up against the losses from shoplifting?

    1. Re:Cigarettes by twelveinchbrain · · Score: 1

      Hello... if they put them behind the counter, then the customers aren't exposed to the shiny packaging and promises of greatness. The companies that make these products pay grocers for good shelf placement. That, I guess, is part of the reason they cost so damn much.

      --
      Not Found
      The requested URL /signature.html was not found on this server.
    2. Re:Cigarettes by splattertrousers · · Score: 1
      You have to wonder why they don't just put them behind the counter, as with cigarettes.

      My electric razor just broke, so while I'm waiting for a new one to arrive, I bought some manual ones. Had the expensive blades been with the cigarettes and the cheap ones been on the shelf where I was looking, I would have just bought the cheap ones.

      But since they were all together on one shelf... welll, ok, I bought the cheap ones anyway. But I did at least look at the expensive ones.

    3. Re:Cigarettes by Sloppy · · Score: 1
      You have to wonder why they don't just put them behind the counter, as with cigarettes.
      That would reduce sales. Cigarette buyers put up with the extra step/hassle because they feel they must buy it, no matter the cost (in $$$, hassle, health, etc).
      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    4. Re:Cigarettes by DocScience · · Score: 1

      Razor blades are often an impulse purchase... out of sight, out of mind.

  26. Put it back... by s10god · · Score: 1

    where you got it... Or you will jumped as a shop lifter. As it only takes a pic at the display then checkout.

  27. Collecting RFID for further shopping by Erik_ · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm now going to make sure I keep all RFID tags I find, and each time I go buy some new blades I'll take them along to swapping their sensors... ;-)

    1. Re:Collecting RFID for further shopping by MrEd · · Score: 1
      --

      Wah!

    2. Re:Collecting RFID for further shopping by DocScience · · Score: 1

      Since each RFID tag has a unique serial number, placing an old tag in the read field will have no effect since it will be known to be a previously sold unit.

  28. Re:Idiot by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    the closed-circuit picture-snapping doesnt even matter. It's just a case of: for every razor picked off a shelf, one is also purchased. The CCsnapping is only important on the shelf-end. You are an idiot.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  29. A losing battle against facial hair... by hiryuu · · Score: 4, Funny
    I shave sometimes with a razor, sometimes with an electric shaver. The Mach3 blades cost something on the order of about 15 USD for five.

    All this for something that you're using to cut off a part of yourself that grows back in a short time.:P

    Before even taking into account physiological differences due to genetics, no matter how much you spend on the blades, you're going to have to shave again tomorrow (some men even sooner). Which is why I gave up the price battle and just use an electric razor for most times, and a pack of the cheap safety razors around for use other times. If my body is going to force me to spend money, I'll certainly make it as little as possible.

    --
    Karma: Excellent, but still won't get you laid.
    1. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Exactly why I eat nothing but hog feed.

    2. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by SifuDave54 · · Score: 1

      you spend as little as possible on hygiene products too?

    3. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by fiftyvolts · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Razor Blades, in my mind, fall somewhere around cigarettes and crack. I asked for a pack as a stocking stuffer last Christmas and was promptly told that things that sell for $25 deserve their own box.

    4. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Zardoz44 · · Score: 1
      I can get 10 Bics for CAD$2, which lasts me about two weeks apiece. So these would cost about $5 a month. A cheap Remmington electric razor goes for $50, but a good one can cost a lot more. This gives you, according to the instructions, about 6 months before you should replace the screen, and a year before you have to replace the blades. The blades + screen will probably run you at least $40 after the year is out (1 razor pack + 2 screens). So I spent $78 dollars on blades (throw in an extra $18 for a year's supply of $3 shaving cream) instead of $90 on electric, and the blades feel better overall anyway, with less irritation.

      So tell me how you're saving money? If you really wanted to save money, you could invest in a straight razor.

    5. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Klaruz · · Score: 1

      A bic lasts you 2 weeks? Wow, you must have some fine hair. My beard destroys a bic in a few days. I can get almost a week out of a mach 3. Not to mention a bic doesn't get close, and it iritates my skin even worse than a mach 3.

      That's all moot since I switched to electric a few years ago. A new set of blades for it once a year ($30, medium priced norelco) and I'm good to go. Another reason to use electric is a regular razor, even a mach 3 causes my neck to really break out. Electric doesn't. As for the iritation and the closeness, you need to use an electric for a month untill your face gets used to it. Then electric is as nice as a razor most of the time.

      The only drawback is if I don't shave for a couple days, the electric pulls hair a bit. That's not bad since I usually shave daily, and cuts will happen with a regular razor at least a couple times a month.

    6. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      I have almost no hair on the sides of my face, so I grow a moustache and beard in the cold season, shaving the sides every day or maybe two. My use of blades goes down dramatically for about 6 months a year.

    7. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cuts a couple times a month? With a mach3? Heck, I've only been shaving for like 6-7 years and never cut myself once! What do you do??

    8. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by hiryuu · · Score: 1
      you spend as little as possible on hygiene products too?

      Hmmm... Be pedantic, or find your post funny? I think I'll go for the latter.

      :P

      --
      Karma: Excellent, but still won't get you laid.
    9. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by RoundTop-VJAS · · Score: 1
      Wow, all you people who don't have tough growth.

      I'm 22 now and have been shaving since I was 12. I have a very tough growth and it grows fast. Eg: I buy a bic and it doesn't do a good job and is dulled before the end of the shave.

      I recently purchased a good $200CDN Phillishave electric shaver which has been good so far. But I still have to use blades for special occasions. Normally I get 1-3 uses out of a Sensor Excel blade before it is dull and gonna nick me.

      --
      RoundTop

    10. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      FFS just do as nature intended and grow a beard!

      Whoever started the idea that men should spend every day scraping their face into to feminise themselves has a lot to answer for.

    11. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'm 22 now and have been shaving since I was 12. I have a very tough growth and it grows fast. Eg: I buy a bic and it doesn't do a good job and is dulled before the end of the shave.

      Well, it could be worse. I can go for 2 weeks and will only grow about an eighth of an inch of stubble between day 3 and day 14. I wish I could grow a decent beard without looking like some early-1990ish Party of Five Charlie wannabe with the constant five o'clock shadow. I want a thick luxurious UNIX guru beard like the other dirty Linux hippies.

    12. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Klaruz · · Score: 1

      Just little nicks, mostly on the chin. It's not like I put huge gashes in my face. Speed shaving in the military may have something to do with that...

    13. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      I am over 30, and the hair in the middile of my face is tough (maybe not as much as yours, but I could never use a disposable), just that I have almost none on the sides of my face. Wearing a beard saves me the pain and blood of trying to shave my neck.

    14. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by draziw · · Score: 2, Informative

      Shave after shower, use gell, side of face, sides of neck, under lip, over lip, center of neck. over lip and center of neck go last so the hair can get more softening time.

      --
      A lower user id and good karma will only get you so far.

    15. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Zog+The+Undeniable · · Score: 1
      If my body is going to force me to spend money, I'll certainly make it as little as possible.

      Which is why I buy the cheapest toilet roll. My bottom isn't too worried about fluffy fibres or, ffs, *scented* paper. Or cut out the middleman and take a dump just before the morning shower!

      --
      When I am king, you will be first against the wall.
    16. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by scorp1us · · Score: 1

      Where do you shop? Sam's club has 20 for $26...

      Mach 3 Turbos are 15/$26...

      --
      Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
    17. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Whoever started the idea that men should spend every day scraping their face into to feminise themselves has a lot to answer for

      That's an extremely good point that most people never think of.

      Nope, I had nothing important to say, just backing you up.

    18. Re:A losing battle against facial hair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Men don't shave to "feminise" themselves, we shave because a clean shaven man looks younger and healthier. Women are (generally) attracted to youth and health. It's all about mating, gents, it's all about mating.

      Doesn't anyone else watch Discovery Channel?

  30. Just Say No! by hachete · · Score: 1

    Lost mine a while ago. I've always hated their intrusiveness.

    I suggest that others lose theirs too before, like the article says, they become the ultimate "personality profiler".

    Just lose the sodding things. Be apathetic *enough* to screw tescos.

    h.

    --
    Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
    1. Re:Just Say No! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lost your what? Razor-blades? Your razor?

      Are you suggesting that people shave with something else? Or not shave at all?

    2. Re:Just Say No! by Nick+Harkin · · Score: 1
      I think he means the store cards, which can help ID trends.

      It was in the article as well.

    3. Re:Just Say No! by WCMI92 · · Score: 1

      "Lost mine a while ago. I've always hated their intrusiveness.
      I suggest that others lose theirs too before, like the article says, they become the ultimate "personality profiler".
      Just lose the sodding things. Be apathetic *enough* to screw tescos."

      The "loyalty" cards have to be used to get the lowest price listed on the shelf, or else you are paying a lot more. At least, that's how it works here in the US, at Krogers and other stores that use them.

      So, what do I do? Naturally, I've never filled out the card with ANY factual information ;)

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
    4. Re:Just Say No! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just took a new card off the pile by the register (it was late night, and the cashier was helping stock shelves). I didn't fill out any application, and the card works fine.

      "Hmm, Mr. , who lives at in the city of just bought something. Interesting"

    5. Re:Just Say No! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you lost a barcode right off a packaging, it would probably be considered a crime somehow.

  31. UK highest crime by linuxislandsucks · · Score: 1

    UK highest crime than detroit?

    oh my my my

    --
    Don't Tread on OpenSource
  32. Gillette UK Customer Phone number by Erik_ · · Score: 2, Informative

    As per the back of a Gillette Mach3 box :
    Questions? Comments? 0800 174543 (UK Only)

  33. Why is this not harmless? by ivan256 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So, you mean instead of training a camera on you continuously as you shop, now they can capture only a few key moments?

    You'd think people would be declaring this a privacy *win* since you'll be video taped less now, and only at the points that matter.

    1. Re:Why is this not harmless? by mgblst · · Score: 1

      I don't think it helps privacy any when they take your photo, and start adding extra information to it, like what you have just bought.

    2. Re:Why is this not harmless? by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      I don't think it helps privacy any when they take your photo, and start adding extra information to it, like what you have just bought.

      Ever see the cameras above the checkout? They can do it already, and they don't need the help of RFID tags either.

    3. Re:Why is this not harmless? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You'd think people would be declaring this a privacy *win* since you'll be video taped less now, and only at the points that matter.
      The article didn't mention (and I tend to doubt) that Tesco is going to remove all of its other surveillance cameras... You aren't going to be taped less, you're going to be taped more.
    4. Re:Why is this not harmless? by edunbar93 · · Score: 1

      SAFEWAY INTERNAL DATA - CONFIDENTIAL

      [photo]

      Name: John Smith.
      Address: 2134 Birch St. St. Paul, Minnesota. 51230
      Phone: (415) 555-1111
      Cell: (415) 555-2222 *from in-store monitors
      Sex: M
      Height: 6'1"
      Weight: 140-160 Lbs. *See photo.
      Age: 27
      Shoplifter: No
      Marital Status: Likely common-law. Unmarried. *See: condom purchases
      Dietary habits: Deficiencies in Zinc and vitamin C. Diet high in sugar and fatty foods. BMI and age indicate that metabolism is high and may be for several years. Customer may be more susceptible to common colds October through March.
      *see: Over-the-counter medication purchases.
      *see also: confection purchases
      *see also: frozen novelty purchases
      Grooming habits: Generally neat.
      *see: personal grooming purchases
      *see also: shampoo purchases

      Advertisement: sending flier 2c by addressed admail first and third friday every month. 15% increase in spending observed over past year.

      ----------

      Adding a new entry to the database isn't scary. :)

      --
      "No problem. I have the capacity to do infinite work so long as you don't mind that my quality approaches zero."-Dilbert
  34. Rube Goldberg? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesnt this seem extremely Rube Goldberg'ish? Taking pictures? Why cant you buy RFID's with some kind of random 6 digit alpha-numeric string appended to the product ID tag? Then they could just compare the RFID's that make it to the register to the ones that leave the store. The odds of someone lifting a pack with the same random "theft prevention" tag are pretty astronomical. Just an idea.

  35. possible way to disable the rfid chips??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am not totally sure, but I believe that if you stick whatever has the rfid chip in a microwave oven under high power for a few seconds, the microwaves will disable the electronics in the chip. What ever the product is should be able to take a few seconds of the waves. If these places have some kind of self-serve deli, it would be a way to bypass the concerns about those nasty little rfid chips...

    1. Re:possible way to disable the rfid chips??? by SifuDave54 · · Score: 1

      bad idea, since razor blades are metal, unless you like fire. fire is fun! I swear, this 20-second/2-minute thing kills your ability to actively participate in a discussion here...

    2. Re:possible way to disable the rfid chips??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the latest Risk Digest: stun guns, cattle prods or other interesting toys. Consider it an oblique way of showing that not all bizarre hobbies are bad ;-).

    3. Re:possible way to disable the rfid chips??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am not saying that you would cook the razor blades, the entire goal is to disable the rfid chip. If you had more accurately read my post, I am merely suggesting a few (2 to 3) second pulse. I realize that this is my mistake, but I am assuming that the rfid chip is a small item bordering on the nano-technology level. A small pulse of microwave radiation should be enough to scramble any circuitry it would possess. If you want to test my theory, stick your cell phone or lap top computer in a microwave for 10 seconds and examine the results. Since you are assuming that microwave ovens only work when set for 20 seconds or 2 minutes, it would lead me to think that you use them for cooking only hot dogs or ramen noodles...I suggest that you alter your diet to include some items that would provide nutrients for your brain.

    4. Re:possible way to disable the rfid chips??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Hey this microwaving my laptop thing isn't wor$%%$#%$^%^^

      NO CARRIER.

    5. Re:possible way to disable the rfid chips??? by WCMI92 · · Score: 1

      "bad idea, since razor blades are metal, unless you like fire. fire is fun! I swear, this 20-second/2-minute thing kills your ability to actively participate in a discussion here..."

      Couldn't something be made akin to a bulk eraser that will send the correct frequency of RF at the tag to overload and destroy it?

      RF devices ARE vulnerable in that way...

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
    6. Re:possible way to disable the rfid chips??? by SifuDave54 · · Score: 1

      wow, you really don't have to be a total asshole, you know. here's some advice to you: try being civil to people and they might take you seriously. (and there's no way I'm stupid enough to stick my laptop in the microwave for any amount of time.)

  36. ...and it's not toothpaste! by swb · · Score: 1

    And I would have thought it was toothpaste...

    1. Re:...and it's not toothpaste! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Not if I breathed on you...

    2. Re:...and it's not toothpaste! by TekPolitik · · Score: 1

      The most stolen item in Britain is Razorblades... And I would have thought it was toothpaste

      Well we all sure as hell knew it wouldn't be soap.

  37. Well, well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...if that isn't another reason for online shopping.

  38. no no! by BigBadDude · · Score: 1



    this is just CIA trying to identify talibans before they go undercover.

  39. booyaa naked jet fighter pilot guy by kisrael · · Score: 2, Funny

    Karma Whoring, mirroring from this sadly defunct comedy site...but I did go and order his book already
    Right now, I want to be like the naked jet pilot, but I'm not like the naked jet pilot. He has three blades on his razor and I have only two.

    You know who I'm talking about? The naked jet pilot on the Gillette commercial? He's got a uniform and a plane and then -- whoah! -- it all disintegrates and suddenly he's standing naked on what looks like the set of Who Wants to be a Millionaire? tenderly caressing his face. That guy. The naked jet pilot.

    What a guy! I mean, he's lost it all: his uniform, his plane. What's he got left? A razor. Not even a can of shaving cream. But you can't keep him down. There he sits, rubbing his face. At least he got a smooth shave! He's looking on the bright side. Booyah naked jet pilot!

    There's something homoerotic about a naked man standing around fondling his face, but I don't think the naked jet pilot is gay. If he is gay, it's just because he's so heterosexual that he's spun the meter all the way around. He appears gay because he's hyper-heterosexual in a way the rest of us can't understand. That's assuming he's an air force pilot. If he's in the navy, he's probably gay.

    Gay or straight, he sure likes that razor! And why not? It's got three blades on it. Three! Check out the computer animated close-up: that'll take the hair off your face! I mean, the commercial implies that this razor disintegrated a state-of-the-art jet aircraft! That's a pretty good razor! They should drop planeloads of these things on Iraq! Even if they didn't destroy the Iraqi ability to make war at least Saddam Hussein could finally rid himself of that five-o'clock shadow he always seems to have.

    (Then again, maybe the razor isn't responsible for the guy's plane falling apart. Maybe his plane just routinely fell apart because he's in the Canadian air force.)

    Personally, I use the Gillette Sensor XL for my shaving needs. It can't destroy military equipment, but make no mistake -- it's a mighty razor. The top of the line in its day. You see, it has two blades. That's one to shave your face and another one, I guess, just to have. Plus, it has some kind of patented goop strip.

    Admittedly the MACH 3, the naked jet-fighter's razor, has a higher blade count, but I'm not planning to upgrade at this time. And I'll tell you why: first off, I'm sitting on a large Costco-size stockpile of Sensor XL blades. Secondly, although I don't consider myself a nervous flier, the fact that the MACH 3 may cause jet aircraft to suddenly disintegrate gives me pause. Thirdly, and most importantly, I'm holding out for the new, four-bladed Gillette product which must be just around the corner.

    Won't that be something! Four blades! One to shave your face, one just to have, one to be like the naked jet pilot, and a spare! That'll give you a smooth shave, I bet. Like, you'll really want to stand around naked caressing your face after using that thing!

    I'm sure Gillette's labs are working on it now. Still, they have to be careful. I mean, if a MACH 3 can rip off a jet pilot's clothes and blow up his airplane and still leave him with a smooth shave, imagine what four blades could do? The guy wouldn't be left with any skin! He'd just be a manly skeleton, standing around on the set of Who Wants to be a Millionaire?, smugly rubbing his mandible.

    --
    SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    1. Re:booyaa naked jet fighter pilot guy by kisrael · · Score: 1

      thanks for the "overrated", jerky. "offtopic", maybe, but yeesh.

      Anyway, getting into why the Mach 3 is so coveted...those blades are so overpriced. But Gilette stuff is really good. (those bunnies didn't die in vain). Still, the Mach 3 is a bit too much of a giant sharp shaving surface, I think the Sensor is much better.

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
  40. So, Do the Blades Nick the Britons... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Or do the Britons nick the blades?

    GIT IT? "NICK"? H4W H4W!!!

    1. Re:So, Do the Blades Nick the Britons... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You blew a perfectly good Soviet Russia joke there. Could I see your comedic licence?

  41. Subvert the process by ninthwave · · Score: 1, Redundant

    take a Mach three from the shelf and set it down in a different isle everytime you are in the store if people do this in large quanitites it frustrates the snapshot game.

    --
    I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said: "I drank what?" - Chris Knight (Val Kilmer)- Real Genius
    1. Re:Subvert the process by edunbar93 · · Score: 1

      if people do this in large quanitites it frustrates the snapshot game.

      Who said you needed numbers to do this? :)

      All you'd really need would be about two people a week. Maybe three or four. It would make the whole process turn up more false alarms than it would positives.

      This kind of scheme also encourages pranksters to take ALL the razor blades off their designated shelf and put them somewhere else. Creative shelf stocking to screw around the security. This isn't illegal by any stretch of the imagination, but you might not be welcome when you come back next time. :)

      --
      "No problem. I have the capacity to do infinite work so long as you don't mind that my quality approaches zero."-Dilbert
  42. Being used for security by PeeweeJD · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I was gonna say that too.

    If they wanted to test it for the supply chain side, they would put them tags in a loaf of bread or a gallon of milk. Something high volume that would let them track some real sales and put their system through its paces. not some gimmicky, expensive razor blades that maybe a couple people per day purchase.

    I can see the press conferences now...

    Shop Spokesman: We are not using these RFID tags for security purposes. It is just pure coincidence that we happen to pick the "most shoplifted" item in Britain to test these on. A very important link in our supply chain entails comparing photos of who picked up an item and who is exiting the store with that item. We are not interested in testing this technology to track the location of something like a case of these razor blades in our warehouse.

  43. I just want to know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What type of tin foil do you use for your hat?

    1. Re:I just want to know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Homemade tin foil of course. You can't trust that store-bought stuff.

  44. Honestly, by SifuDave54 · · Score: 1

    and this isn't a joke, what about those who dislike having their picture taken due to religous reasons? Shouldn't mandatory picture-taking be against some kind of law based on religion? Isn't it descrimination or...or...something?

    1. Re:Honestly, by ninthwave · · Score: 4, Interesting

      CCTV is used very widely in the United Kingdom and it is fairly well posted on signage going into to stores. But even outside of shop fronts in the United Kingdom entire high towns can be under CCTV. The debate was fought awhile ago here in the United Kingdom and because of IRA threats and a constant belief in any culture that crime is always worse than it used to be, people generally supported the idea of CCTV and recorded imagery used for security and police use.

      But RFID adds so many issues, the fact is the rfid is unique and can be followed back to your residence if you have the right scanners so you now have a photo an item if this information is gathered elsewhere you can follow individuals and some facial recognition elsewhere and tie down a persons where abouts with other rfid purchases that may be worn, in theory at least. How close is that theory from reality and should the philosophical and political issued be discuessed now or later. I personally believe if this debate is not stated more clearly and in a broder context of these few products we see on the market the later systems we fear will be in place before we have a voice to do anything about them. But who knows the future is unwritten.

      --
      I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said: "I drank what?" - Chris Knight (Val Kilmer)- Real Genius
    2. Re:Honestly, by analog_line · · Score: 1

      I personally believe if this debate is not stated more clearly and in a broder context of these few products we see on the market the later systems we fear will be in place before we have a voice to do anything about them.

      That assumes that we have a voice in stopping it now. There is literally no way outside of getting laws passed to stop anyone from doing this. "Privacy concerns" are not "privacy laws". Governments don't want privacy because it lessens the control they have over their people. While a few bones may be thrown out to keep people looking elsewhere, there have been ZERO hard privacy gains since this whole issue has come to the forefront. Terrorism, corporate dominance over government (to a lesser extent in Europe) and the general fear that has gripped most of the world these days are eating away at privacy, and nothing will be done about it. People who care about their privacy are in the minority. Maybe if everyone isn't at each other's throats some time in the future (not likely) we might get some gains, but I can't see a damn thing changing for a long time.

      Get used to it, or get used to complaining for the rest of your life about it.

    3. Re:Honestly, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ..entire high towns can be under CCTV..

      Well, maybe they figure if they're all high, they need to keep an eye on them...

    4. Re:Honestly, by ninthwave · · Score: 1

      sorry meant to say high streets and figured the term would not translate back to america so I put in town forgetting to wipe out the high.

      Oh well.
      Such is life every now and again

      --
      I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said: "I drank what?" - Chris Knight (Val Kilmer)- Real Genius
    5. Re:Honestly, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're really worried about them tracking you all the way home, just stop at a convenience store and toss everything you bought in the microwave for about 10 seconds. That should take care of the RFID tags pretty well.

      Sure, they'll be able to track you to that first point in your route, and the new shirt you bought smells like cheap frozen burritos, but at least you'll have your privacy. ;)

  45. cryptome link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  46. Beard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now I now what my reason for a beard is besides being lazy.............

  47. From the article- by IWantMoreSpamPlease · · Score: 1

    ..According to the spokesman,"there are certainly not any privacy concerns" in relation to these tags...

    Of course there are not any privacy concerns, from their point of view. They don't give a damn about *our* privacy concerns.

    --
    So rise up, all ye lost ones, as one, we'll claw the clouds.
  48. My understanding of RFID tags.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...is that they can be "scanned" from a distance away.

    I don't see why a picture is necessary. If someone has an RFID'ed item (say in their pocket), it should get scanned and charged for just like an item being held in the hands or resting in the cart. RFID SHOULD potentially eliminate shoplifting, with NO privacy concerns.

    Imagine going into walmart and instead of each item being scanned separately, the cashier just aims the scanner at your cart, then you, and instantly everything is added to the total. No questions about what you may have slipped into your pockets because it just get's added. The scanner makes no value judgement.

    RFID can be used to make life simpler, as long as we don't start using it to invade privacy.

    1. Re:My understanding of RFID tags.... by efedora · · Score: 1

      IBM has an ad featuring just this scenario. A sinister looking dude strolls through a store, puts something in his pocket and walks out the door. Just as he gets outside a security guard stops him and says, "Excuse me sir, you forgot your receipt". His purchase was automatically recorded by RFID when he walked through the door.

    2. Re:My understanding of RFID tags.... by Nick+Harkin · · Score: 1

      There could be a problem if they aren't disabled after purchase, what if you went into another shop, and got charged again? Or the same shop, wearing the T-shirt you bought from them a couple of days ago?

    3. Re:My understanding of RFID tags.... by El · · Score: 1

      So, everytime I wear my Kmart shirt to go shopping at Kmart, I get charged for it Again??? You're forgetting that these RFID tags don't get disabled the moment you walk out of the store. What if I'm in a mall, and carrying purchases from the other stores?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    4. Re:My understanding of RFID tags.... by DocScience · · Score: 1

      The tags CAN be killed at time of purchase. Additionally, if you walk into another store wearing an enabled tag from a previous purchase, the store database knows that the tag is not for an item currently available for sale. So it's no issue normally. The unknown here is what will happen when the store database is in error and did not record your previous purchase. I suspect that most people will want the tags killed to avoid this potential, just as people remove the paper price tags from purchases today.

    5. Re:My understanding of RFID tags.... by Piquan · · Score: 1

      Then the serial #s don't match what Kmart has in stock, so it's not a sale (or theft).

    6. Re:My understanding of RFID tags.... by Nick+Harkin · · Score: 1
      Agreed, but I can imagine shops offering an incentive to /not/ have the tags killed, maybe by recognising you as a repeat customer, and so forth.

      Won't stop me on the other hand, I would want them killed immediately, or just removed, so I could carry them with me if I wanted.

    7. Re:My understanding of RFID tags.... by Generic+Guy · · Score: 1
      Imagine going into walmart and instead of each item being scanned separately, the cashier just aims the scanner at your cart, then you, and instantly everything is added to the total.

      Except for when it also adds on the "Lindows Rulez!" T-shirt that I bought there last week.

      --
      { - Generic Guy - }
    8. Re:My understanding of RFID tags.... by DocScience · · Score: 1

      Suppose the incentive to NOT kill/remove the tag is a 10% discount or a double warranty? Or protection against theft like engraving your SSN on your stereo?

    9. Re:My understanding of RFID tags.... by Nick+Harkin · · Score: 1
      That's a good idea, I can see them being used instead of receipts for refunds, as it shows when the item was bought, as well as any receipt does.

      I can't see the discount working, as it could be removed afterwards, but saying the extended warrantly is only valid if the tag is working, could work well.

  49. Re:Religious-centric god-nazi by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    Hey, I got one! What if you just dont like having your picture taken? No gods/spirits involved! Could you, possibly, be a fuckwit? Allowing people to practice whatever religion they choose does not automatically exclude them from having non-religious prefrences.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  50. Why is this relevent to the linux community? by peterprior · · Score: 4, Funny

    Everyone knows linux hackers and users don't shave, and the more hair the better.
    Also, simply using the Tesco Online Grocery Shopping system would get round the problem.

    :)

    1. Re:Why is this relevent to the linux community? by blibbleblobble · · Score: 1
      "Also, simply using the Tesco Online Grocery Shopping system would get round the problem."
      Cookie: tesco.com
      Name: SM
      Value: 1058710804950861175
      Expires: 10 December 2009 09:55:48
      Which problem?

    2. Re:Why is this relevent to the linux community? by splattertrousers · · Score: 1

      And judging from the spelling here, half of the /. users are under age 12...

  51. There will be a time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... when your genetic analysis will be available to all suppliers as soon as you are born. At an appropriate age, these suppliers will start supplying razors and stuff to you and automatically start debiting your or your parent's account. No more shoplifting, no more going to the sales clerk, no more hassle of brick and mortar stores.

  52. I wonder if... by Ibby · · Score: 1

    ...store managers or corporate execs are going to get upset if I use my own lead lined shopping cart from now on...

    --
    Karma: Good. I'm hoping in the same way as pizza is 'good'...
    1. Re:I wonder if... by WCMI92 · · Score: 1

      "...store managers or corporate execs are going to get upset if I use my own lead lined shopping cart from now on.."

      What would work better would be some kind of compact jammer that obfuscates the frequencies that the RFID tags use.

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
  53. Neck-beard UNIX guru by AndroidCat · · Score: 5, Funny
    I've always thought that if I could grow a reasonable looking beard that didn't irritate the hell out of me, it could be worth a few thousand more in the job market.

    A solid beard lets you look sage while stroking it and giving a measured Hmmm and a nod, while you try to figure out what the hell to do next.

    Alternately I could extend my moustache to a Fu Manchu and try out for the next Evil Overlord position that opens up. (I've got the laugh, but an extreme moustache is a job requirement, bastards.)

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    1. Re:Neck-beard UNIX guru by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I've debated growing a beard... The thing is that the hair on the top of my head is red. My facial hair, however, is blonde.

      So, my question is, do chicks dig mismatched hair?

    2. Re:Neck-beard UNIX guru by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I too have red hair. And a black beard... ! Seems have been a good move.As you'll know, the hair on your head is worth -5 before you even start chatting up a bird, so the rules are different for us so afflicted. The facial hair seems to throw them sufficiently at first to give you a chance. Best of luck to you brother Red! [You bet I'm posting as AC when it comes to handing out fashion/dating/redheaded advice here]

    3. Re:Neck-beard UNIX guru by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 2, Funny
      Gillette blades are highly valued because being clean shaven is clear evidence that you do not support Bin Laden and are not a Muslim Extremeist.

      Obviously, by using the RFID/Video technology, the FBI will be able to compile a database of all the clean-cut Americans that are not Muslim extremeists.

      So get down to Tescos and have your picture taken NOW, or you may be extradited to Guantanamo Bay in real quick time!

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    4. Re:Neck-beard UNIX guru by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So, my question is, do chicks dig mismatched hair?

      You mean like those blond chicks with black eyebrows? You can have them.

    5. Re:Neck-beard UNIX guru by Physics+Nobody · · Score: 1

      Let's hear it for mismatched hair!

      I on the other hand have brown hair but a red beard. Figure that one out.

      --

      Physics is good

    6. Re:Neck-beard UNIX guru by scruffyMark · · Score: 1

      My hair is blond (and really long) and my beard red. My wife likes it, at any rate. Of course, you could say she's likely biased...

      --

      What is the robbing of a bank, compared to the founding of a bank? -- Bertolt Brecht

  54. Easy to abuse. by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Such a system is very easy to abuse.
    1. Pick-up some blades, making sure you are snapped by the camera.
    2. Move outside of the camera range
    3. Dump the razor blades somewhere else in the store
    4. Pass at the cash
    5. When you are stopped by store security, insist that they call the police to search you - only the police has the right to search you
    6. When the police has found nothing at all, sue the store for false arrest (the manager will perhaps make a counter-offer for free merchandise - I have an aunt to got herself a free mink coat this way after she was arrested by store detectives at Eaton's [Macy's equivalent])
    7. ????
    8. profit!
    After 10-20 people do that trick, mabye the store will reconsider it's policy...
    1. Re:Easy to abuse. by JamesP · · Score: 1

      What about scanner jammers???
      What about keeping an old tag in your pocket?

      This is going to be fun!

      --
      how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
  55. Thank fuck for internet shopping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey I just buy all my shopping over the internet anyway. So unless the guy that brings it to my door is going to take my photo I'm safe

  56. As little added value as possible by panurge · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Of course, this arises because supermarkets try to create as little added value as possible. They hire expensive psychologists who tell them that because we are basically hunter/gatherers, we can be conned into pushing the trolleys round the store and collecting the goods ourselves without realising that we are doing all the work, being exposed to all the advertising and subtle pressure to buy, and they are getting all the money. So, rather than prevent theft by the traditional means (sell things from behind the counter on request) they decide to try RFID - which we pay for - so we can have our privacy invaded at our expense.

    No, I do not have a loyalty card. No, I do not want an application form. I would tell you why, but then I would have to charge you at my usual hourly rates...

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
    1. Re:As little added value as possible by FurryFeet · · Score: 1

      No prob. I can spare the 10 bucks. Please, let us know. ;)

    2. Re:As little added value as possible by FFFish · · Score: 1

      And in return, they get profits of about 2 percent.

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
  57. Gillette Blades by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I gotta say that I hate buying those stupid blades because they're so darn expensive. However, I found that they don't really wear down as fast as you would think they would. I don't have much of a beard really I guess because I'm english . . . but I've been using the same one for more than a month now and it still works better than the disposable kind which sliced up my face pretty good. As long as you take a hot shower first and use a lot of shaving cream, I don't see anything wrong with this one. But maybe I'm just cheap as hell . . .

  58. One company helping Big Brother out... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is none other than March Networks [www.marchnetworks.com]. Video cameras in stores, restauraunts, shipping yard.... Looks like Terry's been a busy boy again...



  59. wal-mart has them because of law suits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Years back wal-mart was hit with several law suits claiming insufficient parking lot protection after a few people were robbed and killed. This lead to a media frenzy which made other people sue for little things.

    Wal-mart is covering there ass because of lawyers.

  60. Misunderstanding by Esion+Modnar · · Score: 1

    Did anyone else think (from the title) that the RFID tag itself took the picture? My next thought was, how could they make it that small, and cheap enough to put on razor blades?!?

    --

    They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
    1. Re:Misunderstanding by twelveinchbrain · · Score: 1

      Have you noticed how much razor blades cost now? At $16 per 8-pack, it won't be long before you can attach a tiny digital camera to the damn things.

      --
      Not Found
      The requested URL /signature.html was not found on this server.
    2. Re:Misunderstanding by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

      That's fscking insane. Anyone that pays that much for razors is an idiot.

      I bought an antique straight razor. Guess it's time to learn how to use it. I bought it last year because I'm pissed at the high cost of throw away razors that I can only use two or three times. Bullshit..

      And now this RFID shit?? Uh uh, time for change..

  61. Lost i t? My God, no! by Eevee · · Score: 1

    Don't you realize how important the data built up on that card is to the store? You can't just throw it away like a common piece of trash!

    You've got to trade it to somebody else!

    That way, the store can have a fine old time pondering why a loyal customer has gone from purchasing beer to bottled water, or has suddenly developed a taste for Norwegian Yak cheese. Has it been a while since your favorite soda's been on sale? Trade with a friend who only buys the competition's brand.

    1. Re:Lost i t? My God, no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try doing this.

  62. Behind pharmacy = drop in sales too. by wackybrit · · Score: 1

    they took the simple step of moving the blades behind the counter at the store pharmacy. Shoplifting drops overnight, no added cost and no privacy concerns.

    And sales should drop too.

    I can't speak for everyone, but I bet a reasonable percentage of people will avoid making a purchase if it involves lining up for an extra 5 minutes (in addition to the checkout time) at the pharmacy. That'd be enough for me to go back to cheap disposables.

  63. Stealing Razor Blades by NSupremo · · Score: 1

    I've done this. It's a definite item to steal.

    Blades are very expensive.

    (oh, and the only reason there is a Mach3 - is that they need to push a new product with a new patent. they would look really bad if a generic blade came out at 1/6 the cost)

    --
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_U.S._Election_co ntroversies_and_irregularities
  64. Real men don't need razorblades by reboot246 · · Score: 1

    I just hammer it in and then chew it off from the inside. Remember to spit afterwards; furballs are a bitch to cough up.

  65. Re:Rape Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Worst lyrics troll ever.

  66. Re:Idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course you could always RTFA : "Another photo is taken at the checkout and security staff compare the two images to ensure they always have a pair."

  67. Imagine the chaos at the register... by ssstraub · · Score: 1

    ...when you take the entire stack of razors, then leave them in the next aisle.

  68. Jesus Christ on a Pogo Stick! by niko9 · · Score: 1

    What's all this fuss about razor blades on Slashdot!

    Especially when all you geeks look the same! :P

  69. You buy razor blades? by Handpaper · · Score: 1

    Save yourself the hassle, save money, protect your privacy - get one of these

  70. You can "check out" any time you want! by Openadvocate · · Score: 2, Funny

    but you can never "leave"

    --
    my sig
    1. Re:You can "check out" any time you want! by Alsee · · Score: 3, Funny

      Welcome to the Hotel RFID.
      We are all just prisoners here of our own device.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  71. I love to tinker with other peoples jobs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I take it from the shelf... I put it back... I take it from the shelf... I put it back... I take it from the shelf... I put it back again... I take it... I put it back... Being in the centre of attention is cool!

  72. Complain to Gillete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I used to be a Gillete user but stopped using their products right now! I informed them of that via their customer service site at http://gillette.custhelp.com/

    1. Re:Complain to Gillete by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

      Woo hoo... an email reply. They'll take the ramblings of some internet reject REAAAAL serious. Now, if you send them a snail-mail letter, they're MUCH more likely to take you seriously.

  73. Hey Joe, can you pick up a pack of razors by HazMat · · Score: 1

    How many times do you ask your shopping companion to pick up something you forgot....

  74. the rest of the story by frovingslosh · · Score: 1

    sure, this makes lots of sense, particularly since no one ever takes an item from a shelf and then looks it over and puts it back. And no one ever goes shopping with some one else, and picks up at item at the other person's request and hands it to the other person before they get to the checkout counter. Such persons are clearly criminal and deserve to be confronted as they leave the store, arrested, and strip searched to find the article they were photographed picking up at the shelf but never buying at the register.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  75. How to subvert it by JCCyC · · Score: 1

    1) Get blade and get photographed.
    2) Drop blade at another part of the store where the cameras aren't pointing.
    3) Check out.
    4) Be submitted to embarassing treatment. The worse the better.
    5) SUE!
    6) PROFIT!

    See? And no "?????" step even!

  76. Re:Buh-wah? Leave it out mate..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    cmon, is it just me or is this a load of bollox. Where is the link to the story to back this up?? It's total rubbish, taco you should be ashamed for letting this through

  77. More cookie madness by beezly · · Score: 1

    Why does a cookie provide a problem? One of the nicer things about cookies is that the client-side (i.e. YOU) have *complete* control over them. Unlike RFID tags, which you have no control over.

    Will people get over cookies once and for all? If you don't like them, turn them off. If you can't turn them off, delete them after each session.

  78. Parts list for patentable products ? by easyCoder · · Score: 1

    Say I went to the hardware shop to build "Mousetrap 2010 - The Terminator" and I put on an 'inspired' face ( whatever that looks like. I'll have to look in the mirror next time I have a really good idea ). Do you think I'll be the only person who know's this list ? If it gets "collated" does that mean the same as "published" ? Also, open question: can video face recognition software detect moods yet ? Just wondering.

  79. I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What are razor blades?

    -- Old Unix guru

  80. There's a flaw here... by Ryosen · · Score: 1

    Do the cameras take your picture if you put the item *back* on the shelf? There have been times when shopping that I have taken something off of a shelf, walked around the store, changed my mind, and put it back. By my math, at least, this would make the store think that I now had *two* packs in my possession.

    Not that I shop at this particular store, but the first time my grocer stops me and accuses me of shoplifting in this type of scenario, is the last time I will shop at his store.

    Not all technical innovations are good.

    --

    Ryosen
    One man's "Troll, +1" is another man's "Insightful, +1".
    1. Re:There's a flaw here... by beebware · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Or what happens when a family are shopping and adult A picks up the razor blades, decides they don't want them and gets child B to return them. Then they get to the checkout and realise they do need them, so they get child C to fetch a new pack - and finally adult D pays for the goods.
      That's really going to screw up any "photographic auditing" system!

    2. Re:There's a flaw here... by Ella+the+Cat · · Score: 1

      Beautiful!

    3. Re:There's a flaw here... by jovlinger · · Score: 1

      hell, every time you go to the store, pick up a pack, and put it down somewhere else before checkout.

      Eventually, they'll have you tagged as a shoplifter, and hassle you. In the states, people have sure department stores for "embarassment" for being falsely accused for shoplifting, but in britiain, I guess the best you can do is to raise a huge fuss about intrusive measures and what not.

      And then be asked not to come back to that store. Convenience or principles: you choose.

    4. Re:There's a flaw here... by base2op · · Score: 1

      If people really object to this a simple way to render the system useless would be to take the blades off the shelf and leave them elsewhere in the store. If enough people do this perhaps they'll have too many "false-positives" to justify the cost of the system.

    5. Re:There's a flaw here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not auditing you fool it's for in store security on highly shoplifted items. Read the article not the idiot who posted it.

    6. Re:There's a flaw here... by beebware · · Score: 1

      I know the nearest Tesco supermarket store to me has those "metal strip" detector thingies (you know: like in libraries in stuff) every 5 feet across all entrances and exits and the razorblades are kept in "DVD-style" cases (which they open at the checkout for you): already quite good security in my book - why do they need to combine it with CCTV?

    7. Re:There's a flaw here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno, but you need to work on your baby names.

  81. Boo-Hoo by dotgod · · Score: 1

    If you don't like the fact that the store does this, find another place to buy (or steal) your razors from. Pretty simple, really.

  82. Read about the idiot police officers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In his interview with the magazine, Alan Robinson recounts an occasion when his Cambridge store was able to show the police a photograph of a shoplifter in the act of removing two packets of razors from the shelf: "The police were completely flabbergasted, having never seen anything like it in their lives."

    Surely they've caught other shoplifters with plain ordinary CCTV before?

  83. Yet another straw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's getting to the point where I hate shopping.
    Everyone looks at you like a thief.. (no I've never stolen anything)

    You are stuck in long lines so they can take your money..

    WTF! It should be easy.

    Let them walk around and get the stuff on your list... Then when I arrive they can load the trunk too. Or let them deliver it.

    If it was available in my city I would cough up the $5 extra for that service.

    1. Re:Yet another straw by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I have no idea where you live, but maybe you should check out Simon Delivers?

      http://www.simondelivers.com/

  84. Fair enough... by benjiboo · · Score: 1

    As long as companies make their customers aware of what they are doing, I don't see a problem with anything like this. The market dictates that if people don't like it, they'll vote with their wallet and shop at a different supermarket.

    --
    Vacancy for signature. Apply within.
  85. It is amazing by jopet · · Score: 1

    When I was last in the UK I was shocked from the number of cameras and CCTVs they use. There is not a spot without a camera. They seem to be obsessed about cameras and when you turn on the TV you see footage of robberies or other stuff captured with these cameras. The bottom line is: the majority of UK citizens seems to like that or at least not to care. They are a sick society, second only to the US. The rest of the world is struggling to catch up with the madness.

  86. Make it cost more to them, then they'll stop by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

    If they start pulling this in the US, I'm going to remember to grab a few packs every time I go in the store and then ditch them in the toy department.

    --
    This space available.
  87. I am there! by cheeseflan · · Score: 1

    Damn. That's it! I am off to the store this afternoon (half hour before it shuts).... I am going to drop 'em as I grab some blades - then when they challenge me, I'll say - "but I wanted to check they would fit in my crack?!"

    --

    Pimping my Karma Whore since 1847.

  88. Indeed by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    I find that many of the disposables to be as good as the expensive blades. Try a couple of different ones, I prefer the Wilkinson Sword disposables which are mid priced.

    Course, then you also get the real cheapy cheapy disposables which seem to be designed specifically to draw as much blood as possible.

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:Indeed by I.A.N.A.T. · · Score: 0

      Course, then you also get the real cheapy cheapy disposables which seem to be designed specifically to draw as much blood as possible.

      That must be the kind Homer Simpson uses. Reference: the medical Marijuana episode. One of the funniest moments in a vast sea of funny moments.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is the greatest country in the world doesn't mean we're superior...oh wait, yes it does.
  89. from the now-thats-just-creapy dept. by johnot · · Score: 1

    "Here's your Americano, sir, would you like some Creap with that?"

    mmmm....onegai...

  90. Troll day today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    3x more likely to molest a child vs men - CASC
    8x more likely to cause perment physical damage to a child - CASC
    12x more likely to be involved in a murder - statscan
    4x more likely to steal - statscan
    5x more likely to commit fraud - statscan
    85% cdn tax money that returns to canadian citizen hands goes to women

    Coming from a source who what I know of got booed out of three work places for misrepresenting the statistics gathered-Worker satisfaction 2001, I'd have to say the sources are unreliable. Without heaviest consequences 25+ for falsified or misrepresented data manipulation of statics and data will be rampant.

    Fraud and marrage, let's face it, it's the biggest income earner amoung women and the most undeserved.
    A guy has a right to say no to an abortion, even from a one night stand, if a guy gives consent, he swears off all responsibility to that child.---no custody, no money, no consent, no abortion. The same process of gathering information in a rape trial can be used to discover the identiy of the child's father.

    Manners and provication are the leading cause of death amoung women and thier partners.

  91. Kill switches and EAS by Naosuke · · Score: 1

    "Katherine Albrecht at Caspian doesn't. 'Why would I take the kill switch seriously?' she asks. 'I have no way of knowing if they have done it or not, I have to take their word for it.'"

    I work Security for Target so I am very familiar with the EAS (Electronic Alarm System) devices. The towers send out a weak FM radio signal which hits an antenna (EAS tag) and sets off the alarm. To make it so that honest customers don't set off the alarm there are pads (EAS pads) that deactivate these tags. (They also deactivate Credit cards, the chip in smart cards, and generally screw with things that are sensitive to magnets.) I don't know for sure how the ID tags work, but it likely would make the alarm go off. So the stores would then make it so The EAS pads deactivate these as well, if they do not already.

    The article also mentions security personnel would compare the photos of people who buy razors. No they won't; it takes too much time. In order to compare photos in a somewhat timely manner, it would most likely take an extra person per shift whose job it was to check photos, and that's just a waste in resources. Another thing to consider would be that in order to get a shot of the product you would need to put the camera on the other side of the aisle, facing the razors, which would give security a nice picture of the customer's back. You could put the camera on the side of the aisle, but that would still only give you a profile shot and not the straight on face shots that security likes. How would the camera know when you picked up the product? It's much easier to skip the RFID tag and just put a camera recording the aisle all the time.

    1. Re:Kill switches and EAS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "..don't set off the alarm there are pads (EAS pads) that deactivate these tags."

      It would be alot easier if the internal server removed the UPC from the alarm list. It's more likely current RFIF tags broadcast the life it was meant to.

    2. Re:Kill switches and EAS by Naosuke · · Score: 1

      UPCs have nothing to do with it; it's antennas at the door sensing radio signals. They only have two settings on and off.

  92. Could be the next Evil cheeto-bearded Linux dude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This could be you.

  93. Re:Could be the next Evil cheeto-bearded Linux dud by AndroidCat · · Score: 1
    Linux? Nah, I'd start my own fork: EvilBSD.

    That which is not dead can eternal lie,
    and with strange eons even death may die.

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  94. Gives a new meaning to... by twelveinchbrain · · Score: 1

    the brand "Gillette Sensor".

    --
    Not Found
    The requested URL /signature.html was not found on this server.
  95. Buck the System for Fun... by New+World+Odor · · Score: 0

    Well, I thought about a pretty easy way to cause a little trouble for the Reichmarshalls...

    Grab ALL the razors from the shelf, and smile REAL nice if you must. Look decent too, maybe a blue dress shirt with a gold tie (men), scarf (women). Walk on over to the, oh, Feminine products and dump them all there. Go home. Hopefully...

    I figure that the RFID's will be screaming for the safety of the transponders, and being America, they will be set on Orange alert, the UK will be under Ricine alert, and Canada will do what ever the polls say. Therefore, security may be dispatched to find the missing family members. BE WARY! You may be stopped by security. Just RELAX! Say nothing! It may take up your time, but you stole nothing. When the cops come, complain bitterly about the treatment of an HONEST, HARD-WORKING citizen (Dressed in Blue and Gold, the cops will think you are an ally!). Then go home. It costs you time, but it will cost the company money. That could work. 99% of us are honest, and I am SICK of being treated like the 1%!

  96. Re:Idiot by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    of course, you seem to be missing the point- you could read the fucking post. Just because some idiot is paid to compare two images doesnt mean the second image is in any way actually used. Not to mention that you could get that without reading the article- it was in the summary, moron.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  97. Am I the only one... by DingoBueno · · Score: 1

    ...who dry-shaves with a pair scissors?

    --
    ascii art
    1. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, most of us only have more than 4 chin hairs.

  98. The door is the threshold by bagofbeans · · Score: 1

    Walk out the door; you've bought or stolen them at that point, black and white. Starts to become grey (intent to steal etc) if you bypass the checkout and hang around between them and the door.

  99. CCTV can also ID you by jmichaelg · · Score: 2, Interesting

    London uses CCTV to impose a congestion charge on you whenever you drive into downtown London. The camera photographs your car and you get a bill for driving in the city. The idea is to reduce traffic to a manageable level and provide revenues for the bus system.

    The tax is politically unusual in that Milton Friedman, a conservative economist at the University of Chicago, came up with the idea and Ken Livingston, a socialist, implemented it.

    1. Re:CCTV can also ID you by zenyu · · Score: 1

      London uses CCTV to impose a congestion charge on you whenever you drive into downtown London. ...snip... The tax is politically unusual in that Milton Friedman, a conservative economist at the University of Chicago, came up with the idea and Ken Livingston, a socialist, implemented it.

      This is also a tax that is significantly fairer than the ones it replaces. Enough so that I see it as a justification for the existance of these things over the immediate privacy concerns. It makes me think that we need to regulate CCTV rather than outlaw governments using it.

      We need retention policies, much like some countries force utilities to destoy individual records (like what phone numbers you called last month) after you've paid the bill uncontested. I never lose sleep over recordings of myself from a month ago, but from a year ago I don't really remember what I did and know someone can have power over me with the information asymetry. At ten years it severly limits you, do you think GWB would have even run if his Nader had tapes of him enjoying some blow or a tape of the police arresting him for his DWI? I may not like GWB but I don't think that sort of thing is good for democracy. Everyone worth electing has some skeletons in the closet that would end their political career, the fact that those not worth electing do to is no justification for monitoring everything.

      Aside from retention policies the captured information should not be used for off label uses. Exceptions can be made for murder suspects or child molesters under warrant, but I don't want a search warrant to be enough to open up records of someone's entire life. There was a case in my area where a woman got a contested divorce against her husband after the judge issued a warrant for his toll records which showed that he'd been visiting his mistress. I don't think it would have been wrong if the wife had seen the bill and noticed some discrepency, but getting the information from god like tracking systems is just wrong. Maybe he was checking out IKEA furnature for his bachelor pad after he left her, he probably doesn't remember why he crossed a particular bridge a year ago. Maybe it was to rob a convenience store, but he really doesn't want to tell the judge that, maybe the wife knew and held it over him after spending the money. There is a statute of limitations on most crimes because you need to remember the events of the period in order to defend yourself properly. Unless you were shoplifting you probably don't remember where and when you bought the Mach III shavers you used in January, it shouldn't be used in a child custody suit. If you aren't trying to cheat the highway authority will you really remember why you crossed a bridge a month ago, considering you have an automated system to take care of the payment you do it often enough that it isn't an event in your life.

      Then there is the whole cadre of new security officers that will be critiquing your underwear purchases (well if you're a girl). I think RFID should simply be illegal on underwear and feminine hygene products, it's just asking for trouble from the "security professionals" I've known.

  100. The real reason! by God!+Awful+2 · · Score: 1

    Have you ever seen a clean-shaven terrorist?

    -a

    1. Re:The real reason! by netsharc · · Score: 1

      Timothy McVeigh?

      Hmm quite a failed logic. Bin Laden and Co. don't shave because they believe it's against their religion. If they don't shave, why would they buy Gillete Mach 3s?

      --
      What time is it/will be over there? Check with my iPhone app!
    2. Re:The real reason! by God!+Awful+2 · · Score: 2, Funny


      Hmm quite a failed logic. Bin Laden and Co. don't shave because they believe it's against their religion. If they don't shave, why would they buy Gillete Mach 3s?

      That's why they need the cameras. If an unshaven guy who looks like a terrorist buys a razor then it must be for some nefarious purpose, such as sticking it in Halloween candy.

      -a

    3. Re:The real reason! by Oliver+Wendell+Jones · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Did you guys even read the news after 9/11? They found notes that the guys had been handed by their 'leaders' reminding them to shave so they wouldn't look like terrorists...

      --
      A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing -- Emo Phillips
  101. Why no cheap imitation blades? by D4MO · · Score: 1

    Why isn't there some company making cheap blades that fit onto Mach3 handles? I mean, my car maker is not forcing me to buy particular bulbs when my car breaklights die, or particular oil for my engine. Is there some mad patent or something?

    --

    Rocket science is easy. Neurosurgery, now *that's* difficult.
    1. Re:Why no cheap imitation blades? by cyril3 · · Score: 1
      I suspect the attachment mechanism is patented to avoid just that. But in any case what would be the point? If I wanted to use cheap blades I wouldn't bother keeping the Mach 3 handle.

      Though it does have an "ergonomic handle" featuring "knurled elastomeric crescents." otherwise known as knobbly rubber grips on the handle. And you can't beat knurled elastomeric crescents when you want a quick effective shave.

  102. Re:Obvious problem RFID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a new copyright licensing deal, I lease (never own) the pants, socks and shirts I wear. If I neglect to pay the monthly sock bill, the sock magically disappear or swat arrives through my living room window.

  103. haha! by rebelcool · · Score: 1
    You pay less you get less blades

    For shame! Who do they think they are?

    There are like X varieties and they are are all about same price per quanity (+-20%). That is a monopoly...

    hahaha. Perhaps you should look up the meaning of 'monopoly'. Pricing things similarly does not equal 'monopoly'. 20% off? That's huge for such common items especially in an arena like disposable consumer goods where profit margins are razor thin. (that pun is COMPLETELY intended)

    But I'm going to guess that since you don't know what a monopoly is, you don't know what a profit margin is either, or the nature of consumer goods manufacturing.

    --

    -

    1. Re:haha! by murgee · · Score: 2, Insightful
      But I'm going to guess that since you don't know what a monopoly is, you don't know what a profit margin is either, or the nature of consumer goods manufacturing.

      And that makes him(her) how much different from the majority of slashdotters? ;-)

      --
      mrg
    2. Re:haha! by imaniack · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Margins on razorblades are actually pretty darn good for the manufacturors. Just think about it: why do you think Warren Buffet holds big stake in Gillette? Why do you think those blades can be manufactured in USA and not china? Another thing: blade market is not monopoly but it is oligapoly and I wouldn't be surprised if they are fixing price somehow.

  104. Cause false alarms. by quoz · · Score: 1

    Pick 'em up off the shelf, carry then arround and put them down in another part of the store. Pick 'em up and hand them to a friend in another isle, have him buy them. keep an old box with the RFID tags still in it in your pocket whenever you go to the store. Encourage others to do the same.You havn't done anything wrong, but it will cause them headaches, and may cause them to rethink the plan.

  105. fuck this. by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

    Take a hammer into the stores and smash the cameras. Everyone in England should go around and smash every single camera in the entire country. England is the absolute epitome of Big Brother bullshit and the just get worse and worse and worse. And when you think that they can't get any worse, well, they do..

    People should storm the places, factories, plants, stores that make and distribute these tracking devices, chips cameras etc. The people that make these things into policy should be sumarily tried and executed in public.

    Everyone that is connected with these devices should be sumarily tried and executed and all the machines that are connected to this technology should be destroyed.

    These people are EVIL. There is no other evil like what drives these people, they are EVIL..

  106. Fun hack to fight RFID. by Alsee · · Score: 4, Interesting

    RFID works on frequencies and power levels that are perfctly legal to receive and re-broadcast. Imaging walking around with a tiny device that constantly listens for RFID codes and randomly rebroadcasts the last 5,000 codes it's stored.

    Another cute device but trickier to make might listen for RFID codes to start and jump in in the middle drowning out the last half of the code with random garbage.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    1. Re:Fun hack to fight RFID. by gerardrj · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Of course, you can't just "listen" for RFID codes to be broadcast. You have to actively transmit energy at them in order for the tags to emit the code. Once you do that you'll have to be within about 3 feet of the tag to recieve the code. The chips contain no power source themselves.

      The only place in a store you could routinely recieve tag codes without your own transmitter would be near the checkout registers or perhaps the exit scanners.

      I guess a small reciever run by 9V battery could be double-stick taped to a shelf near the register and retieved later so you could look over the data.

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    2. Re:Fun hack to fight RFID. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Of course, you can't just "listen" for RFID codes to be broadcast.

      You mentioned yourself that you can "just listen" for them when the store scans them. Or you could include your own transmitter to activate them yourself. The second option will pick up way more RFID codes, but it is more complicated and requires a much larger battery pack. Either way you can you can wreak chaos on their systems :)

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    3. Re:Fun hack to fight RFID. by gerardrj · · Score: 1

      The inference I drew from your first comment was that you expected the ability to sit in the mall and "listen" to the RFIDs emitting from the bags of people walking by (or something like this).

      The "just listening" scenereo I outlined involves covertly planting, and possibly later recovering a reciever, near an existing legitimate RFID transiever . This is more like eves dropping than just listening in my view. Sort of like the difference between listening to people chat at the fountain during lumch vs using a parabolic microphone and a high gain amp. Even in the example I gave, recieving the RFID code would require the clandestine device to be placed probably within inches of the transmitter. Just think how close together cash registers are to each other. You have to guarantee that register #1 can not "hear" register #2's RFID transmissions. To do that the transmission range out of the RFID tags would need to be about one or two feet max.

      In any event, simply collecting and possibly retransmitting the RFID codes will not likely wreak the chaos you desire. The clerk will simply have to manually enter the SKU or perhaps fall back to a scannable barcode label.
      You could cause more chaos and confusion if you spend time in a store randomly moving merhandise from where they store places it to some random location. Moving two tubes of toothpaste to hide them behind the stereo display, putting small socks inside pants pockets on the racks. It's fun for the whole family.

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    4. Re:Fun hack to fight RFID. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I have looked at quit a bit of the law and I have been looking at lots of cases.

      No, I mean just keeping one in your pocket all the time. Every once in a while it would happen to pick up a signal by chance, add it to the history list. If anyone tried to scan youfor whaterver RFID's you have on you they'll get a whole list a valid but random codes.

      =SCAN=
      =BLIP=
      RFID detected:
      Victoria's Secret
      Second Skin Satin® Collection DEMI BRA
      Black Size 36A 38B-D #150-517 $26

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    5. Re:Fun hack to fight RFID. by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

      You have bras coming within 1 foot of your pocket?

    6. Re:Fun hack to fight RFID. by gerardrj · · Score: 1

      No, it most likely wouldn't.

      Plus the RFID data will very likely only include the SKU, sure you CAN store more information, but that costs money.
      What would a pocket full of: 9232-2325, 3983-7343,0023-7373 do for you?

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    7. Re:Fun hack to fight RFID. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      You have bras coming within 1 foot of your pocket?

      As often as I can :)

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    8. Re:Fun hack to fight RFID. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Plus the RFID data will very likely only include the SKU

      True, but people scanning for RFID's ARE going to be trying to look them up in their databases.

      What would a pocket full of: 9232-2325, 3983-7343,0023-7373 do for you?
      The same thing as swapping supermarket discount cards with your friends. It interferes with people trying to collect/snoop data on you. If someone scans you they get garbage.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  107. Why not jam them? by MemoryAid · · Score: 2, Informative
    These tags work on unlicensed portions of the frequency spectrum, so why not jam them? The Alien Technology site gives the frequencies they use: Alien Technology

    Admittedly, the 2450MHz band is the same as WiFi, so most of us would be opposed to jamming that on general principles, but it looks like the 915MHz band is what is being used more often. The Alien Technology tags for 2450 look really big and expensive.

    It should only take about a watt or two with a bandwidth of 26MHz in the low band or 56.5Hz in high band. (These numbers from the FCC web site:FCC frequency spectrum PDF Some sort of pulse modulation would probably help the jamming, too.

    Heck, you could probably take the RF shielding off an appropriate-speed laptop and walk around with it as a first iteration of the design. I remember the old Apple ][+ used to jam channel 6 pretty well.

    --
    Language students: Don't try to learn English here. This ain't it.
    1. Re:Why not jam them? by ftzdomino · · Score: 2, Informative

      Apparently it's not quite that simple:

      http://216.239.53.104/search?q=cache:7prnEPBlP0E J: theory.lcs.mit.edu/~rivest/JuelsRivestSzydlo-TheBl ockerTag.pdf+rfid+jamming&hl=en&ie=UTF-8

  108. Algorithm for Stealing Razor Blades. by sbaker · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Not that I recommend doing such a thing - but just to highlight
    why this is a silly idea...

    1) Go to the razor blade stand - pick up a pack of blades - get
    photo taken.

    2) Hand pack of blades to your wife as she's buying cornflakes in
    the next aisle. Say "Honey - please pay for these - I have to go
    to the store next door."

    3) Leave store.

    4) When they stop you leaving the store and accuse you of not paying for
    the blades you picked up - tell them that you left the blades in the
    Cornflakes aisle. Let them strip-search you - you don't have
    the blades. Make a terrible fuss.

    5) They let you go with profuse apologies.

    6) Your wife then leaves the store - with pack of blades in her pocket
    'forgetting' to pay for them. Nobody bats an eyelid because her photo
    didn't get taken at the razor blade shelf.

    So why don't they simply correlate the RFID tags that they detect going
    through the exit of the store with an RFID tag on the till reciept and
    directly check that every tag that they detect as marked as being in the
    store's inventory is also in the database as having been sold against
    that reciept?

    Nobody's privacy is invaded - it's all perfectly anonymous.

    I don't see the need for all the photography and consequent invasion of
    privacy.

    --
    www.sjbaker.org
  109. Britainitis afflicts the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever notice that Britian seems to first manifest everything we don't like about the USA? Tabloids. Consumerism carried too far. Cameras in the streets to fight crime. RFID to, uh, help the store. Decline of real freedom corresponding to increased retoric about freedom.

    "But it's better than Iraq!" Yeah. And worse than the rest of Europe.

    1. Re:Britainitis afflicts the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep goes right along with all the Loss of right to self protection and the nanny welfare state.
      It's that or the english really are just roudy, thieving bastages.

      Pick one ..

  110. No privacy concerns? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If anything, having to go up to a counter where your picture is being taken and ask for something is a hell of a lot more privacy-intrusive than just snapping your mugshot as you pick up the item.

  111. Yeah, but... by Jack+Zombie · · Score: 1

    What if I just let the camera take a shot of something else other than my head? After all, the camera can't tell the difference between feet and face. And what if the employeers try to take upskirt shots with these cameras? I can sense a whole new voyeur trend coming...

    --
    "You should never doubt what nobody is sure about." -- Willy Wonka
  112. No sale by CopperDream · · Score: 1

    What if I put tha package back (and in the wrong place)? Will they see I only have one photo and put out an APB for my arrest?

    "Excuse me sir, can you hand me a pack of those razor blades you're standing next to? Thanks..."

    Okay, maybe this will help them catch the dumb shoplifters.

  113. For The Thrifty-Minded by Quothz · · Score: 1

    Here is a guy who claims that cheap pink ladies' disposable razors are the best you can get. I'd love to see some empirical testing. In the meantime, I'll stick with my cheap electric shaver and learn to love stubble.

    Of course, the googly eyes cost extra.

  114. so for fun... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So for fun we should all just take the razors off the shelf and leave them scattered throughout the store?

  115. Obviously... by SwansonMarpalum · · Score: 1

    The solution here is to break the system. Take razors off the shelf then leave them elsewhere within the store. You're not shoplifting and you can cause enough noise that the system is worthless.

    --
    "Give away the stone, let the oceans take and transmutate this cold and faded anchor." - Maynard James Keenan
    1. Re:Obviously... by WCMI92 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "The solution here is to break the system. Take razors off the shelf then leave them elsewhere within the store. You're not shoplifting and you can cause enough noise that the system is worthless."

      Until Fritz and Berman pass the Digital Millenium Shopping Act that makes it a felony to "circumvent" (or obfuscate) any hair brained "shoplifiting protection system" even if you don't steal ANYTHING.

      Sooner or later the day will come when we are guilty of a crime for simply making it DIFFICULT for private and government authorites to track our every move...

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
    2. Re:Obviously... by badzilla · · Score: 1

      As I've said before, it's illegal in (at least) the UK to interfere with the operation of a unique ID'd wireless device. Read the Act carefully.

      --
      "Don't belong. Never join. Think for yourself. Peace." V.Stone, Microsoft Corporation
    3. Re:Obviously... by WCMI92 · · Score: 1

      "As I've said before, it's illegal in (at least) the UK to interfere with the operation of a unique ID'd wireless device. Read the Act carefully."

      You limeys might consider ridding yourselves of King George ;)

      Seriously though, I don't see us getting rid of RFID here in the US. RFID is the WET DREAM of the likes of Felon Poindexter and the others who want to spy on American Citizens. An unholy alliance of common interests of the Big Brother types and the Marketers will be HARD to break!

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
  116. Mix This with Face Recognition Software by kmilani2134 · · Score: 1
    Although face recognition software isn't a very good solution for airport security, it could have an interesting (if not scary) application in the supermarket.

    Let's say you have all of these RFID tagged items in your shopping cart and a camera has taken your picture and logged your picture and all of your items into a database. Then on every trip to the store, they could not only have an idea about when you shop and how often, but what you are buying and how your buying habits are changing.

    Of course, people who use credit cards when shopping would already be susceptible to such a thing (though I have not heard of any cases of this). Unlike a credit card, the cameras at least wouldn't be tying your identity to your purchase...at least not in a certain sense.

    Think I need to wear baseball caps more often...Or maybe I should upgrade to a sombrero.

    --
    Those who trade freedom for security will lose both, and deserve neither" -- Ben Franklin
  117. SO make a habit of fucking with their system by MadCow42 · · Score: 1

    1) go pick up a pack of blades
    2) dump it elsewhere in the store
    3) when security wants to search you for shoplifting, ask them what compensation they're going to give you for your inconvenience when they find nothing
    4) if there's some cute (to your specification) security people, then do it several times a day

    Get enough people to do this, and they'll give up on the practice.

    --
    I used to have a sig, but I set it free and it never came back.
    1. Re:SO make a habit of fucking with their system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you might need something obvious like booing at commercials at movie theaters.

  118. So what? by volkris · · Score: 1

    You know, I went through that whole damn article looking for something negative in the deal. There simply isn't one.

    I'm so annoyed by whiney, irrational Slashdotters screaming out "No, you can't track me! You might use the data!"

    But so what? I swipe my frequent buyer card at the grocery store and they track me. So what? I pay what I want to pay for groceries and if they somehow manage to lower the prices by profiting off of the information they got from me then great. Even if they simply profit and don't lower prices for me, why should I care? I don't loose anything just because the store makes more of a profit.

    "Oh, but you loose privacy! The store will know what you're buying!" Right...... so?

    The entire argument in these types of things is a completely irrational one that goes, basically, "We can't let them have our information because then they'll know things about us," but never in the conversation is there ever anything rationally negative. It just goes by this understanding that there's some unstated problem with people knowing things about you, even when you give your permission with like frequent buyer cards (that is, even when you know it's happening).

    GOD Slashdotters piss me off.

    1. Re:So what? by Mr+Muppet · · Score: 1

      I think people like to "forget" all the other times they're being tracked (or do something with the potential to be tracked). For example, any time you apply for credit and the company so a search on you, it gets logged permanently on your credit history (dunno about other countries, but it does here in the UK).

      At work I can bring a customer's credit history up just like that, and tell you how much in arrears he/she is with their home shopping catalogue, or how much they borrowed to do the house up with from the loan they had three years ago.

      Some people default (not pay) their loans, and don't care, but they forget it's tracked!!! And then they wonder why no-one else will give them a loan.

      But back to the topic... I have a store loyalty card myself. I don't care they know what I buy or where I live, but I get some nice money off coupons every three months which gets me some nice savings on my petrol bill. Occasionally get some beer vouchers too :-)

      So, to all the whingers.... There IS an upside!!

  119. Re:Idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um, who's the moron? You say "some idiot is paid to compare two images", but then say that doesn't mean the "second image is in any way actually used."

    It's used to compare to the first image, idiot.

  120. If the store has sales clerks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give them the shopping list with Mach 3's on the list, have them find your items. If they want your business, they might do your shopping. And for fun, decide not to get the blades and leave the box somewhere in the store, that will give the security staff hours of pleasure.

  121. why 3? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    In the video on cryptome, the designers demonstrate this technology and if you buy more than three it creates a theft alert. why three? do they have something against people who buy in bulk?

  122. Just too much fun. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get together with a friend, take the item off the shelf and pass it to him somewhere in the store. Scream and holler about your rights when they grab you.

    If you don't have a friend, just put it somewhere in the produce section before you leave.

    You could also keep taking one, putting it back, taking it, putting it back....

    I am sure there are plenty of ways to annoy such a system :P They will of course pass a law forbidding this type of behaviour "Thou shalt not annoy the security system." but for now it is legal.

    NR

  123. New e-commerce idea by failedlogic · · Score: 1

    Razorbaldes.com -- Order on-line and we promise we won't need your picture to process the order.

    --
    Ok, so it points to Amazon. Oh, well.

  124. Not exactly fool proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many of you have taken an item off the shelf and later finding you dont want it. Then in a state of total lazyness you just shov the item on the nearest shelf. I have a few times. Does that mean if I were to do that with a pack of mach 3 blades and walk out of the store I will be stopped and searched?

  125. Here's the problem I see.. by Reziac · · Score: 2, Insightful
    From the article, wrt the theft issue:

    At the Tesco Cambridge store, reports the magazine, a camera trained on the Gillette blade shelf, and triggered by the tags, captures a photo of each customer who removes a Mach3 pack. Another photo is taken at the checkout and security staff compare the two images to ensure they always have a pair.

    So you and your wife are shopping, you drop a pack of blades in your common cart, then you go out to the car. Meanwhile your wife gets to the cashier, and her photo sure doesn't match the scratchy-faced guy who put the blades in the cart. Hey, lady, you tryin' to kipe these or somethin'??

    Now what? It seems innocuous enough on the surface -- your wife merely pays for the blades and life goes on as before. But multiply this by every family with kids who shop in the usual random way, and it's a helluva lot of inconvenience (and if there's any justice, more cost to the store than the theft prevention is worth).

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    1. Re:Here's the problem I see.. by cicadia · · Score: 1
      Hey, lady, you tryin' to kipe these or somethin'??

      "Um, no, actually, I'm trying to pay for them."

      (Meanwhile, of course, her husband is being tackled by three armed security guards in the parking lot)

      --
      Living better through chemicals
    2. Re:Here's the problem I see.. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      And her kids are being hauled away by Child Welfare, because brawling and shoplifting are not proper parental virtues...

      The only way to make this system work is for everyone to have their own RFID chip, so you can be ID'd when you pick the item off the shelf, when you pay for it, when you leave the store with it, when you run out and need more...

      I think I need to upgrade my tinfoil hat. ;)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    3. Re:Here's the problem I see.. by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1
      So you and your wife are shopping, you drop a pack of blades in your common cart, then you go out to the car.

      It's not your wife that's gonna get the third degree. They have a picture of YOU picking up the blades and now you're trying to leave without paying for them.

      Prepare to be boarded.

      Actually, I'd be inclined to do the 'pick up a razor, and put it down in some random location' thing. Leave them guessing as to where they went.. (as long as you're willing to put up with thw occasional rectal probe when they decide you're stealing.

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    4. Re:Here's the problem I see.. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Yep, I didn't phrase that well, but you went where I intended anyway :)

      And imagine the fun a pack of kids could have by rearranging things all over the store. Then when they get to the checkout, you've got this pack of underagers who you can't do anything to without parental consent, so you've got to call the juvenile authorities, who after about the 3rd such call will flag it as a nuisance complaint to be answered only if they run out of anything else to do.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  126. Avoid the store by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 1

    My immediate reaction would be to start avoiding that store and patronize other stores instead. If they see a drop in revenue after they put these in, they'll get the message that it's not a good idea.

    Hint to stores: being too nosy is not a good way to inspire loyalty in me.

  127. No more looking at the labels by mindlessrabble · · Score: 1

    I think of all the times I take a package down to read the label and then put it back.

    I guess I would have to stop reading labels. Which means I would probably not buy.

  128. Re:Idiot by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    you consider that "usage", you appear to be a moron.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  129. A clean-shaven terrorist by yerricde · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes, I have seen a clean-shaven terrorist. Here's a big picture of him.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  130. Stawberries, whip cream, a rose, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a bottle of Dom, and 3 boxes of rat poison.

    Will this be in the security flag database negative file?

  131. Misinformation on Tesco test by DocScience · · Score: 1

    In actuality, the Gillette smart shelf logic only signals for recording from the surveilance camera system when three or more packages of replacement blades are removed at the same time... this is indicative not of shopping but of theft. No store has enough security people to monitor, track and verify all the shoppers who purchase blades nor would they want to. Waste of money.

    1. Re:Misinformation on Tesco test by cyril3 · · Score: 1
      Amazing, the price is so high that buying three packs tags you as a potential thief.

      Was your post supposed to make us feel better. With three women and two men in our household it would be common for me to need three razor packs at one time.

    2. Re:Misinformation on Tesco test by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

      I hope you mean family (wife, husband, 2 daughters, one son) and not a huge group of flatmates. I can't imagine that many flatmates getting along peacefully (digression: is it a long, like a lot? or along?)

    3. Re:Misinformation on Tesco test by cyril3 · · Score: 1

      That particular assumption would probably get you arrested in the EU (How dare you assume I'm normal. Ooh, I've been villified, I'm sure I have. Officer arrest this person over the head with your baton. Take that you swine (with apologies to out cloven hoofed friends) , have you learned your lesson yet or do you need more re-education with this rubber hose) but in answer to your questiuon, Yes.

    4. Re:Misinformation on Tesco test by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

      No, No... I wasn't judging that particular lifestyle, just saying in my experience, that many people living together (especially mixed gender) tend not to get along without there being a bloodbath or two.

    5. Re:Misinformation on Tesco test by DocScience · · Score: 1

      My post was meant to convey that the folks at Gillette are interested in identification of thieves, not shoppers. I was at K-Mart yesterday. Mach 3 turbo blades were $15 for a pack of 8. Are you seriously going to buy 3 of the same SKU? That's almost $50 for blades. Heck... I have a hard enough time buying ONE pack since the old one is still shaving pretty well... but then I am pretty cheap. And assume you do buy three... big deal, some security wonk in a booth is gonna watch you until you check out.

  132. Re:Obvious solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone start picking up Gilette Mach3 blades and deposit them behind something big in the frozen food freezer.
    When you get to the checkout tell them you changed your mind because they were too expensive and get a free body cavity search.

  133. Re:Could be the next Evil cheeto-bearded Linux dud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    BSD is undead!

  134. fun by not_anne · · Score: 1

    My husband actually uses these blades, and from now on every time I go to the market, I'm going to pick up several packs pf Mach3s and gleefully distribute them throughout the store. Wheee!

    n/a

    --
    My comments here are my own; I do not speak for my employer.
  135. Web action by Carrion+Creeper · · Score: 1

    A protesst for this would be a perfect action for one of those email/web random event things.

    People on the list who want razors (and a good chunk of non-buyers for good measure) all go at one time to a store and madly swap razors after they pick them up off the shelves. Even if security doesn't go completely bonkers (someone _must_ be stealing something), it would certainly screw up their tracking systems.

    This would be great for any number of RFID/super spying consumer tracking methods. Keep in mind this is also how car thieves steal cars: set of the alarm a few times first until no one cares.

  136. A call to action! by erroneus · · Score: 1

    Okay you UK blokes. Go to the stores where this is happening and get all of the Mach3 blades and then put them somewhere else in the store. Then leave.

  137. A little too complicated? by silverhalide · · Score: 1

    What about existing magnetic inventory control tags that are deactivated at the register? I know many stores use these, are easily embedded in the products, and don't invade privacy as much. I don't see how the RFID labor-intensive process will gain adoptance over the relatively passive inventory control of the existing magnetic tags -- intervention is only required when a tag is either accidentally not deactivated or someone is actually stealing something.

  138. Re:PBAA Wants YOU! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    stfu island nigger

  139. Don't joke; it happens by jtheory · · Score: 1

    Not unless you maul the package, take out the rfid chip, and hide it in your sock.

    Don't be so quick to rule out this kind of thing. I just read an article the other day about a man who did
    exactly that.

    --
    There are only 10 types of people: those who understand decimal, those who don't, and, uh, 8 other types I forget.
  140. The solution: by MattRog · · Score: 3, Informative

    The best shave is with an open razor.

    It's a lot of fun, too. Not to mention a lot of time and effort -- but if you have the time the results over electric and the Mach 3 are nothing short of fantastic.

    --

    Thanks,
    --
    Matt
  141. All these hypothetical flaw posts... by ChangeOnInstall · · Score: 1

    C'mon guys, here's the real scenario that causes the problem:

    A customer walks in, takes a pack of razor blades and puts it in his cart. The cameras take his picture and link it to the RFID of the blades.

    Before checking out, he decides he doesn't want them. Perhaps he sets them down in the cereal aisle. Perhaps he puts them on the Schick rack. The customer pays for his other items and heads out to his car.

    A thief who is aware of the system, sees the razor blades that are no longer being tracked. He steals them. He walks out the door.

    What now?

    And, while I'm ranting, why not simply scan the damn RFIDs on the way out the door and verify that they've been purchased...if not, sound the alarm. Such a system would be far superior to employing someone to compare photos of razor-blade takers to razor-blade purchasers. It'd be the exact same idea as the magnets they embed in clothing, and wouldn't be nearly as offensive.

    --
    What has *science* done?!? -- Dr. Weird (ATHF)
  142. That was my first impulse too by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    If such a system ever gets to the states, I think I would do that just for the hell of it.

    A related vulnerability is that you could have one kid go in the store, pick up a few razor blades, then hide them behind the paper towels... then accomplice #2 comes in and picks them up from the un-monitored location.

    I wonder why they don't just have a light by the door that goes on anytime someone with razor blades goes by? Then if you see someone leaving without paying you know something's up.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  143. No coincidence by retro128 · · Score: 1

    With all this Big Brother crap coming out of England, it's no wonder George Orwell was British.

    --
    -R
  144. Missing the point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Guys, maybe I'm shot away, but I think many of you are missing the point. The whole point of RFIDs are for stock control- shelf and point of sale. If you take it off the shelf then a backoffice system registers it to be restocked/reodered the next time it runs a batch. Put it back on the shelf - it gets readded to the stock level.

    The holy grail of this is to eliminate the time wasted at cashiers, as your trolley can be wheeled though a checkout and all the RFIDs check themselves out. Two seconds later a bill appears, you hand over the cash, away you go. In bigger supermarkets you will probably be verified as you walk out the door with a more sensitive scanner to make sure that your outgoings match what you just paid/billed for. With the token minority thug in uniform just to make sure you don't do a runner. Chances are if you "forget" that those mach 10 mega supercharged blades are in your back pocket you would have been billed for it anyway - depending on the checkout setup.

    The whole idea of the photo I imagine is a convenient piggy back on the rf technology - as there is an event triggered when the product is removed. It makes sense to do it then. If this wasn't such a big problem, nobody would have been bothered enough about this to develop these systems. I also wouldn't be worried about being tracked/categoriesed/etc by these things. Supermarkets don't really care what you look like. To them, you are a number. (see next paragraph). Not to mention the medium strong data protection laws in UK don't make this attractive for supermarkets.

    All the tracking/categorising they can use is already gathered through use of debit/credit cards, and loyalty cards. US viewers should appreciate that over here we use debit cards for amounts greater than 1.50 pounds like sheep without too much thought. Loyalty cards are very popular too. Note that supermarkets here can't even deal with there loyalty schemes. They're all outsourced to professional agencies for pattern analysis due to the sheer amount of stuff that is collected.

    But back to rfids - supermarkets and Britain in general has more cctv cameras than anywhere, more than most of us still actually realise. The point of taking the photo when you take the item off the shelf is to eliminate the easy "I didn't put that in my pocket" etc rubbish excuses. These can then be cross referenced with the cctv system.
    Families included, even briefcase style exchanges will probably be picked up.

    RFID systems mean more convenience to the shopper, and it will mean you can just run in and run out of a shop as queues will move much faster, less and less sore arms for checkout staff, less theft will mean cheaper prices. (and more profit) Get a grip guys, its just simple economics - not everything is X files material.

    1. Re:Missing the point? by krusadr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The whole point of RFIDs are for stock control- shelf and point of sale.

      Umm - so why the cameras? A bar code can provide perfect stock control. These RFIDs are for MARKETING so lets not kid ourselves any longer.

      Two years ago I lived 20 miles outside Cambridge (now 5000 miles away) - if I was still there I'd let the cam snap me picking them up, drop them elsewhere in the store and have a good argument on the way out when the store security guard tries to get physical.

      --
      while sco {
      wget -O /dev/null http://www.sco.com?sco=litigious%20bastards
      }
  145. Lexmark razors (n/t) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    or maybe just a little

  146. New From the IRS: AUTOMATIC AUDIT by waspleg · · Score: 1

    how about in 20 years when every single product has one and the IRS uses a sattelite to simply tally all the shit in your house and the dates that they were manufacturered and sold to you with your reported income...

    uncle sam needs all the money he is entitled too after all right?

    1. Re:New From the IRS: AUTOMATIC AUDIT by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Er, the only think the IRS would be able to bill you on due to satellite intelligence would be an under-the-table roof repair.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
  147. Yet another boycott? by waspleg · · Score: 1

    if they try shit shit in the US i won't be buying their razors anymore

    gillette sent me a free mach 3 on my 18th birthday and i liked it a lot and was impressed that such a company even existed, i dont' recall coke giving me a free 12 pack or any other company

    as a result i've been buying their blades and razor's exclusively since that time but if they want to get draconian they will start losing customers one at a time the same way the gained them.

  148. 1984 by skinfitz · · Score: 1

    With all the references to razor blades in his story, perhaps George Orwell was trying to tell us something in 1984.

    "Got any razor blades brother?"

  149. Mischief! by ajs318 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This could be enormous fun. Imagine now. A group of people go into a supermarket and disperse. Half the group each select a packet of razor blades, then pass them to members of the other half of the group, who take them to the tills and pay.

    Or just keep picking up packs of razor blades, wandering around the store for awhile and putting them back on the shelves. Or wave a packet of razor blades back and forth in front of the sensor to keep taking photographs.

    In some stores, you can go out to the exit side of the checkout e.g. to go to the tobacco kiosk - there is only one exit, with security guards in attendance. You could sneak packets of razor blades out of the main sales floor, then pass them backward through the checkouts, triggering the cameras as you go. Put the blades back on the shelves.

    If there is an easy way to kill the RFID tags or blind the sensors {this will require experimentation} then maybe this can be done right there in-store.

    Yes, there is plenty of potential for fun to be had with these things.

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  150. gee? by Cyn · · Score: 1

    I understand that this is because of shoplifting - but as far as the 'kids steal them then come back to return them' issue - seems to me it goes something like this:

    yes i'd like to return these.
    Okay. *scans item* Thanks, our records indicate this item is already stocked on the shelves and hasn't been sold - would you mind showing me your reciept.
    uhhh I lost it.
    weren't you just in here yesterday?
    uhhh. ...

    and of course someone counters with "but the kid will just argue that they made a mistake" - yeah, well, then don't bitch about them implementing camera or behind-the-counter.

    --
    cyn, free software and *nix operating systems enthusiast.
  151. What if I decide not to buy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and just put them down someplace else in the store. Granted, I admit the practice is lazy and rude, but frankly, it's common. I pick up the blades, see there is a mile long line at the checkout and I'm on a parking meter, just put the blades down on the nearest product display and walk out. Are they going to try and arrest me?

    This isn't a contrived scenario, I frequently change my mind about something and if it's one of those damned warehouse stores I just put the product I don't want down anywhere.

  152. Re:Could be the next Evil cheeto-bearded Linux dud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you sure you aren't thinking of Plan 9?

  153. The 10 step program to eliminating RFID tags by imtheguru · · Score: 1

    Step 1: Take one pack at a time off the shelf ... letting the camera take your picture each time. Stroll nonchalantly to the checkout counter.

    Step 2: Checkout person sees your photo on their console, asks if u have a loyalty card. Start your statement with "i do not have a sodding loyalty card".

    Step 3: After checkout person rings up all yor items, politely ask "do any items have RFID tags on them? if so, i will not purchasing them".

    Step 4: Checkout person calls manager to confirm and eventually is is forced to remove razor blades from list. Since they had to remove the blades there is no allegation of theft.

    Step 5: Lather

    Step 6: Rinse

    Step 7: Repeat

    Step 8: RFID tags gets unpopular with retailers and data miners start to see RFID tagged items being returned.

    and the obligatory last two steps

    Step 9: ???

    Step 10: PROFIT !!!

    --
    Yet Socrates himself is particularly missed.
    A lovely little thinker but a bugger when he's pissed.
  154. ..why is this a problem? by Archon-X · · Score: 1

    Why is this a problem?
    IT just so happens that razor blades are the most expensive things that you can slip in your pocket in a supermarket, so Gillette's 'overheads' can be quite significant.

    I don't know about non-australian supermarkets, but every single aisle is under video surveillence any way. I'd prefer to have my photo taken whilst buying razors so the price can be kept down, as opposed to me scratching my arse between the cornflakes and pumpkin aisle.

  155. At $12 for a 2 packs, no need to wonder why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...these *must* be very high up on the shoplifter's target list.

  156. I wouldn't have a problem with that by wuice · · Score: 1

    I might be alone here, but I don't care what the hell the stores use RFID tags for as long as there is some way to remove their tags from my product when I leave their store (which I don't think there is but I'm not too up on this issue so I don't know). I walk under the eye of a dozen security cameras a day. I don't like it, but it's no better than having my snapshot taken when I grab some razor blades. Privacy is something I don't expect when I am in public.

    I don't care what techniques they use to prevent shoplifting within the confines of their store, but once I leave their store I don't want to inherit the artifacts of their internal systems.

  157. Old People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't hire old people they are out of touch with technology.

  158. Once Again I Have To Explain It All To You People by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

    You don't buy all thes fancy fraggin' blades. We have TWO-blade razors forever, then suddenly they discover THREE blades are better. What about next year (or next decade?) Will they discover FOUR blades are better?

    Just buy a vibrating head razor and use the cheaper two-blade razors. A vibrating head razor allows you to cut closer than any electric razor and almost never cut youtself. And you can extend the blade life this way.

    Jeez.... High-tech /.'rs, yeah, right...

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  159. Look at Tesco's Data Protection Register entry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the UK, companies wishing to acquire, process or deal in personal information MUST, by law, register their database(s) with the Data Protection Registrar. This is a government department which is supposed to enforce the data protection laws - and maintain a register of what data is being acquired, and what happens to it ...

    Have a look at the abridges entry for Tesco Stores ... http://www.dpr.gov.uk/cgi-bin/dpr98-fetch.pl?sourc e=DPR&docid=191794

    Basically, it seems to register an interest for them to take almost any piece of information, process it in any way they see fit, and dispose of information to almost anyone almost anywhere in the world.

    I wonder if the mandatory opt-outs (users refusing their personal information to be processed) would have any effect of the RF-ID debate ???

    1. Re:Look at Tesco's Data Protection Register entry by krusadr · · Score: 1

      This is amazing - read that link and copy it into a letter to Tesco pointing out that you object (if you object :)

      --
      while sco {
      wget -O /dev/null http://www.sco.com?sco=litigious%20bastards
      }
  160. How about using this for more expensive products by spike+it · · Score: 1

    Hmm? If you're going to use something this silly, at least use it to protect your store against theft of more expensive items!

  161. Most ridiculous thing I have heard of in a while by Seahawk91 · · Score: 1

    First, people are already being videotaped in stores without any signs being posted. Second, I pick it up off the shelf and hand it to my wife who always has the checkbook. Does she go to jail or me for not picking it up and being the same person buying it. Third, how many security guards will you have to pay to compare the photos. Maybe they can hire a facial recognition programming expert at $100 an hour to write software to track this clearly criminal behaviour. I am sure the RIAA is behind all of this.

  162. supermarket cards and security photography by scifiber_phil · · Score: 1

    At my local supermarket there is a large sign on the door warning that unauthorized photography is not permitted inside the store. As soon as you walk in the door, if you glance upward, you can see yourself on tv via their cameras. At least one supermarket chain here will absolutly refuse to give any discounts without their store ID card. I find this appalling, as this is food, something that we need to even exist, and they have the gall to say that if I want the same price as everyone else for the stuff that actually keeps me alive, I must allow them to track my every purchase, and sell the data to who knows who, and use it for who knows what. May they all rot in hell along with the telemarketting industry.

  163. Self checkout featured in T3 Rise of the Machines by nounderscores · · Score: 1

    Kate and Kate's Feiancee try to scan a bowl with a hand-held self-checkout scanner to buy it as a present for kate's father (the 3 star general guy). The scanner doesnt work, prompting him to say "I hate machines."

    The rest of the movie shows that machines hate them right back.

  164. Opt-In vs. Opt-Out by quinkin · · Score: 1
    Opt-In vs. Opt-Out

    Compare and contrast.

    Q.

    --
    Insert Signature Here
  165. I know this is true by aminorex · · Score: 1

    ...because i picked up some blades and then tossed
    them in my wife's cart. Then I headed for the car.
    My wife did the checkout thing. Next time I went to
    the store, I was dragged down to the gaol and anally
    searched.

    --
    -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  166. RFID Body Implant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about a RFID body implant? Implanted at birth, wired to detect criminal activity. Link that to some satellite with a laser cannon. Upon exit every bank robber is instantly vapourized. Uhhh, ahhh, ohhh, don't you love that...?!?!?

  167. Buy blades. Jam the system. by FFFish · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Buy RFID-tagged products! Keep the tags! Spread them around!

    I think I will push Mach 3 RFID tags into, oh, a bunch of banannas. Or a loaf of bread. Drop it into a shampoo bottle. And if WalMart starts RFIDing underwear, it will be even more fun...

    --

    --
    Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
  168. LET'S STOP RFID NOW. by howiefl · · Score: 1

    Here is a nice site that shows the technical info about RFID tags. I am sure there is someone out there that can offer up a solution for us all to use. http://www.spectraid.net/Products/Spec.htm
    BTW, they apparently operate at 915.3 MHz or 869.4 MHz (for those to lazy to read the specs)

  169. Party game by TekPolitik · · Score: 1

    Go to razor-blade shelf. Pick up razor blades with RFID tag. Hide elsewhere in store. Repeat.

  170. Shit. There goes a way of life. . ! by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
    I haven't paid to shave since. . .

    I don't remember, actually.

    So does this mean that I'm the guy responsible for people in the U.K. having the thumbscrews tightened up on them another notch?

    Sheesh. Sorry, guys!

    Actually, I stopped shaving with blades altogether many years ago, so clearly this is a case of over-reaction. I don't know about Gillette, but fuck Bic, anyway. Cheep bastards! I know a past executive of that company who, back in the Seventies, got fired because he had a moral problem with planned obsolescence; Did you know that for abut two cents more per unit, it's possible to make razor blades that last 10x longer? --Which, according to the Fuck-The-Man-Rules-Of-Engagement, meant that to do the system proper justice, one had to keep track of the blades you stole, and pay for every 10th one. --Becase, you know, shoplifting without a rules set leads to savagry. I'm not a barbarian, after all.

    Who the hell needs 5 blades? And those packages are simply bands of cardboard which leave the product exposed to the air, just begging people to make the most rational decision in the world, which is, of course, "But I only need one. These bastards are trying to screw me! Well, screw THEM! They'll never catch me! They put the magnetic strip on the cardboard, not the blades! Fools!"

    --And look where this leads us. . ! To the creation of the exact atmosphere we're seeing here. One in which, a ridiculous over-reaction, with embedded chips and video cameras and all, can enter our reality on the wings of a somewhat reasonable-sounding argument. "But shoplifters!" --Yeah, because you're greedy assholes who make it too easy. What? Shrink wrapping would eat up another 2 cents profit? --Not to mention that you wouldn't even need to do that, if you would be so kind as to make a GOOD product and sell them ONE at a damned time!

    Greed, folks! We all know it, and we all know where it's taking us. (WWIII and the borgification of humanity.) Now pardon me, but my thumbscrew needs oiling.


    -FL

  171. Alternatives to the way it might work... by diggem · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What if somebody picked up a pack of razors then decided not to buy them later on while still shopping. Rather than returning to the razor isle, he sets them down right there. Later somebody else see's them sitting there and picks them up.

    Now the store saw him pick them up, but didn't notice the remainder of the interaction with that particular pack of razor blades. Now you've just tweaked the system.

    So if I don't set them back down in the same isle I could get searched as I walk out because I didn't purchase razor blades?

  172. Blow the tags? by fatcat1111 · · Score: 1

    I wonder -- what's the feasibility of walking by the display and discharing enough power at the RFID tags to make them give up thier magic smoke?

    --
    How Politicians Lie: http://www.factcheck.org/
  173. Your store is 12% fragmented by AllenChristopher · · Score: 1

    It is recommended that your defragment your store now.

  174. Re:How about using this for more expensive product by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

    Razor blades (especially the Super-mega-penultimate-mach-1000-now-UltraLax(r) ones that you don't need but they try and sell you anyways) are apparantly one of the most stolen items, particularly stolen then returned. Price:size ratio is pretty high (at a 1cm x 5cm x 4cm package costing $20 or so), plus they force obsolescence on you (gilette sensor excel blades are half the price, but try actually picking up a razor for them. and while i'm on that point, why is it that all the acceptable razors (the ones that don't scrape half the layers of your skin off while you try to use them) are expensive as crap... every other product in the world you can find a mostly accepable, affordable alternative for). Not to mention the fact that they're basically required in the western world (like deoderant, or even better example, toilet paper), you'd be a damned fool not to steal them.

  175. Re:Once Again I Have To Explain It All To You Peop by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of a MadTV skit. The Gilette Mach 20 "The first blade cuts the stubble. The second blade cuts it even shorter. The 5th blade removes the skin. The 12th blade removes the remaining flesh from the bone", etc

  176. time to screw with them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go to the shelf, take off fifty packs of blades. Toss them in the cart. Now wonder around the store deciding "I don't really want that" and ditching them on shelves all 'round the store. When you check out they'll probably want to know where the blades are ... do you really think I could have 50 packs of blades in my pants?

    Really, if you are a retailer with anything that has such a high $$$/volume and comes in small volumes, then you are an IDIOT not to keep it locked up!

  177. False arrest and imprisonment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok... so what happens if the camera in the aisle is working, and the one in the checkout lane glitches, or the server crashes? Lets also suppose that the manager of the store isn't very bright.

    Lets say you checkout during the camera server reboot and toss the reciept into the trash on your way out of the store. What happens now? Is your picture posted in the grocery store as a shoplifter since they saw you take the thing, but they didn't see you pay for it, and now you don't have the reciept?

    Be afraid, very afraid. I fully expect a lot of cases to develop like this as time goes on. Big Brother crashes, idiot operators aren't trained or don't care, and cases of mistaken crime happen, with court acceptible evidence to back up the prosecutor.

    Or how about this scenario:
    Clerk's recently-ex boyfriend in line. Clerk has access to system and removes (or tricks the manager into removing) the checkout portion of the transaction by voiding the transaction. Manager has too many voids that day, so "cleans" this one up.

    I am no POS expert, but I am a programmer. I certainly know that the above technical scenarios are possible in other types of systems.

    l8,
    AC

  178. Please by saskwach · · Score: 0

    You call Bush a terrorist and link to a site that says that his campaign was funded by Nazi Germany and that now he's part of an elaborate plot to expand Israel? What kind of moron puts this stuff up? I'm not a huge fan of our president, but seriously, use your brain for a second.

    1. Re:Please by yerricde · · Score: 1

      I was going for a Funny moderation. I don't sincerely believe that the President is a terrorist. I wanted only to show that there exist people who don't have a mustache or beard and who are regarded by at least one organization as a terrorist. Mod me to heck with your other account if you want.

      --
      Will I retire or break 10K?
    2. Re:Please by saskwach · · Score: 0

      ah...well in that case, it is funny :oP but that web site creeped me out

  179. Re:Religious-centric god-nazi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yeah, but the non-religious preferences aren't necessarily protected by the (US) constitution...

  180. Re:Self checkout featured in T3 Rise of the Machin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    dang it!

    I wasn't going to go see it, but after your review i realize that i must. Bastard.

  181. Fun!!!! by pinka4242 · · Score: 0

    I would at least like to see what happens when the RFID reader in a nearby shop does when it sees half the amount of stuff in the whole store passing by. ;) In finland we have this new ticket system for public transp which is based on similar tech. I would be happy to let the ticket inspectors read my "ticket". Also a jammer in that situation would be priceless! Pinka - Renegade Master

  182. This is my local store! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think some experiments are in order :)

  183. The article is probably misleading you by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

    I don't think they care if the pair match, I think they work to ensure that there is some form of pair: one taken pack mates with one purchase. The photos become useful when a pack is taken and not purchased. The article does make it sound like they're trying to get them to match, but as you suggest, that doesn't make a lot of sense.

    1. Re:The article is probably misleading you by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I don't think they've thought this through very well, given all the perfectly ordinary shopping scenarios we all came up with on short notice, that would create a ruckus at the checkout line despite a complete lack of wrongdoing.

      As to what I think you're getting at -- where someone picks up a pack, but it then disappears from mortal ken, the photographed person is presumed to have shoplifted it. (That what you meant?)

      But even that is poor proof. What if said person changed his mind and dropped it on some random shelf elsewhere? What if another person then puts it in his pocket? Person A gets arrested for shoplifting, but Person B gets away with theft (assuming the RFID doesn't howl for the cops as it passes out the door in a still-active state).

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    2. Re:The article is probably misleading you by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      But even that is poor proof.

      In fact, I'd say no proof.

      dropped it on some random shelf elsewhere?

      Presumably, if the RFID tags were embedded with the blade itself, it would be picked up at a later inventory.

      A single incident might not be suggestive. Unusual? Yes. Odd? Not really. Suggestive? No. But if the same guy showed up several times as having picked up a pack without that pack being purchased, I might keep an eye on him the next time he was in the store.

      The camera "evidence" might actually be enough to evoke a confession.

    3. Re:The article is probably misleading you by Reziac · · Score: 1

      IOW, the concept's usefulness is limited to pattern-offenders, and socially-engineering confessions from probable-offenders. Meanwhile, the average shopper gets the brunt of the inconvenience.

      A smart thief would limit their pilferage to stuff that's already wandered away from its original shelf, thus has already taken someone else's picture.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    4. Re:The article is probably misleading you by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, the average shopper gets the brunt of the inconvenience.

      Am I missing something? What inconvenience? The inconvenience of being temporarily photographed without your explicit knowledge?

      the concept's usefulness is limited to pattern-offenders, and socially-engineering confessions from probable-offenders.

      Are you suggesting that RFID tags in blades will allow authorities to get innocent people to confess to stealing razor blades? Where did this come from?

      A smart thief would limit their pilferage to stuff that's already wandered away from its original shelf, thus has already taken someone else's picture.

      That's what I would do. Of course, if a store has RFID-sensitive cameras where razors are kept, they probably have an existing, rather thorough CCTV setup keeping an eye out for this type of thing as well. Granted, it's back to "low tech" shoplifting prevention, but they're no worse off than they are today.

    5. Re:The article is probably misleading you by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Inconvenience: read back up the thread, where I mention various ways to confuse the system via perfectly normal family shopping scenarios.

      As to social engineering confessions -- I meant from the guilty, by a surprise confrontation. Without the surprise, they'd have time to get their "defense" in order and would be less likely to confess.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    6. Re:The article is probably misleading you by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      various ways to confuse the system via perfectly normal family shopping scenarios.

      Got it. I think most stores would elect to err on the side of the customer than to annoy a significant percentage of them like that, though.

    7. Re:The article is probably misleading you by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Yep. In fact, after a few irate customers cause a big ugly scene, I suspect most would drop it altogether.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?