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Thought you could scam the system? Changes to the self-serve checkouts will make stealing impossible

Buyer beware.

It seems harmless to put your pine nuts through the self-serve registers as an apple, right? It saves you money; the store wonโ€™t notice the difference and no-one will be any the wiser.

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Hereโ€™s the thing, the stores do notice.

Abusing the self-serve checkout machines is still stealing, and itโ€™s against the law โ€“ yet 10% of shoppers admit to doing it.

News.com.au have reported that new technology out of NSW may be about to wipe out self-service theft for good.

An Australian start-up has devised a product recognition system, which films, then identify the products being checked out without the need for a barcode.

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Some people are extremely upset about the changes and have strong opinions about the morals around stealing from self-service checkouts.

โ€œAnyone who pays for more than half of their stuff in self-checkout is a total moron,โ€ one customer said in an online forum.

โ€œLet me makes something clear; There is NO MORAL ISSUE with stealing from a store that forces you to use self-checkout, period. THEY ARE CHARGING YOU TO WORK AT THEIR STORE,โ€ they concluded.

While a somewhat radical point of view, people agree that while they are not โ€˜pro theftโ€™, they are hesitant to defend companies spending money on automating employee functions and more likely to turn a blind-eye to stealing if they see it.

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Tiliter Technology, the NSW company who developed the new โ€˜smart-checkoutsโ€™ explain there are big savings to be made with the installation of their product.

โ€œThe big value for supermarkets is removing the significant loss seen from people entering the wrong information when using self-service checkouts,โ€ the company told News.com.au.

โ€œOur tech is different from some of the stuff we have seen struggle in the past because it can tell the difference between a red delicious and royal gala apple for example,โ€ he said.

Australian Retailersโ€™ Associationโ€™s executive director Russell Zimmerman called the technology a โ€œgodsend.โ€

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Buy beware!

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