Amazon Just Legalized Shoplifting, Sort Of

Walk in, take stuff, leave.

Amazon Just Legalized Shoplifting, Sort Of

Amazon Just Legalized Shoplifting, Sort Of

By Kirk Miller

No lines. No checkout. No human interaction whatsoever.

A dream for New Yorkers, but now a reality in Seattle. Unveiled today, Amazon Go allows shoppers to enter and leave a new Seattle storefront without doing any of the normal store things, like opening up a wallet or checking out.

Dubbed “Just Walk Out Shopping,” it feels like shoplifting, but legal! You will eventually pay, but in an unobtrusive way.

How it works: You download the new Amazon Go app, then scan in with your app upon entering the store. Utilizing similar tech as self-driving cars, an array of computer vision monitors, sensors and deep learning algorithms work together to detect what you pick up in the store and keep track of everything in a virtual cart.

Then, walk out. Whatever you take is charged to your Amazon account.

What can you buy? The store seems dedicated to lunchtime convenience: ready-to-eat meals, snacks, groceries, meal kits and such. Right now, it’s only available to Amazon employees, with a public open for the store scheduled for 2017.

We wouldn’t be worried (yet) if we were in retail: so far, this seems like a somewhat advanced version of self-checkout lanes in grocery stores and drugstores — and we all know how well those work.

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