Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Social Networks

Some Amazon Ring Customers Demand Drivers Dance, Then Post Videos Online (nytimes.com) 58

From the New York Times: As Gita Jackson reported recently in Vice News, some Amazon customers are now explicitly asking the company's drivers to deliver a performance along with the package. They are posting signs to their front doors or tapping unusual delivery instructions into the Amazon app in the hopes of capturing a spectacle on their surveillance feeds.... [T]hese customers proceed to shamelessly post the evidence to social media. Sometimes the videos are spun into an online sleuthing opportunity, as the TikToker asks viewers to hunt for the dancing driver's identity. And they represent just a slice of the "Amazon driver approaches the door" genre of internet video... But whether the video is pitched as heartwarming or sadistic, the customer is enlisting the driver into a nonconsensual pageant that doubles as a performance review. As Jackson reported, Amazon drivers who fail to fulfill customer requests risk demerits....

Amazon encourages customers to publicize their Ring videos on its safety-minded social network, Neighbors, and makes it easy to share them more widely, too. One of Ring's marketing lines is "A lot happens at your front door," and this is meant as both a warning and an invitation — though it suggests it is too dangerous to venture outside, it also implies that a whole world of entertainment is to be found through eyeing your surveillance feed.... The official Ring YouTube channel is filled with user-generated videos that help inject its growing spy network with warmth and surprise, as the cameras catch spontaneous footage of good Samaritans, grazing cows and, of course, the company's drivers caught in kooky scenarios, like in this entry from December: "Even a Giant Bear Will Not Stop This Amazon Driver From Making His Delivery."

Amazon obsessively surveils its workers through dashcams, smartphone monitors and machine-generated report cards, and these videos implicate the customer in that exercise, making the violation of driver privacy into a kind of internet-wide contest. The caption for Amazon's bear video focuses on the heroic actions of a Ring user named Josh, who supposedly aided the delivery driver's safety by "watching his exit the whole time" on the security camera.... Its routes are often serviced by precarious gig workers, its quotas are too punishing to allow for socializing, and all potential human interactions have been replaced by one-way surveillance. In many of these TikTok videos, Amazon workers literally run in and out of the frame. If delivery drivers were once lightly teased or frequently ogled, now they are simply dehumanized, plugged into machine-run networks and expected to move product with robotic efficiency. The compulsory dance trend on TikTok suggests that customers, too, have come to see drivers as programmable....

On an even more depressing corner of Amazon TikTok, customers post videos not to backwardly celebrate drivers but just to shame them for delivering the package with less than the customer's expected level of service.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Some Amazon Ring Customers Demand Drivers Dance, Then Post Videos Online

Comments Filter:
  • by NateFromMich ( 6359610 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @01:39PM (#62262213)
    Surely if I dance, entirely using my middle finger, they'll appreciate it.
    • Re:Ok (Score:5, Insightful)

      by NateFromMich ( 6359610 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @01:42PM (#62262219)
      I have another idea. Amazon should start canceling Prime accounts for abusing their employees. These sorts of people would probably not appreciate that at all.
      • by edis ( 266347 )

        Something along that. It must be mutually business-ethics framed behavior with the respect due, instead of the "playful" abuse.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Wow. I thought I was just getting next day delivery (or sometimes even same day) by signing up for Amazon Prime, but apparently I can request the Amazon drivers do other things too? This is sick!

          How long until I can request specific drivers and have them give me a strip tease, lap-dance (or more) with my Amazon Prime delivery?

          "Ooh yeah, twerk it, Amazon, twerk it!"

          Handled With Care. Followed Instructions. Above and Beyond.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        Or banning accounts entirely, including for the current delivery.

        And if Amazon doesn't do that, the customer isn't the real problem, Amazon's management is.

        And we've know who the real problem is for years.

      • Re:Ok (Score:5, Funny)

        by ThumpBzztZoom ( 6976422 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @03:02PM (#62262407)

        The only reason Amazon would cancel a customer for abusing their employees is that they don't want the competition.

        • The only reason Amazon would cancel a customer for abusing their employees is that they don't want the competition.

          Yeah, but having your drivers wasting time instead of delivering packages is bad for business.

          • They'll solve that by firing the drivers for being slow, not fixing the problem. They can always find another desperate person to drive for them. Doing anything to prevent this might risk removing a reason for more sick fuckers to buy a Ring.

      • by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @11:30PM (#62263071)

        I have another idea. Amazon should start canceling Prime accounts for abusing their employees. These sorts of people would probably not appreciate that at all.

        FTS: "As Jackson reported, Amazon drivers who fail to fulfill customer requests risk demerits..." and "its quotas are too punishing to allow for socializing, and all potential human interactions have been replaced by one-way surveillance. In many of these TikTok videos, Amazon workers literally run in and out of the frame."

        Does this sound like a company that gives enough of a rat's ass about its employees' welfare to risk pissing off customers in aid of fairness and decency?

        The only thing that will stop this decadent, late-Roman-empire level of classist abuse in the short term is properly crafted, punishingly harsh, strictly enforced legislation. In the long term, a huge percentage of the population needs to grow up, get their heads out of their asses, and get in touch with whatever sympathy and empathy they possess. I was physically, viscerally disgusted by what I read in the summary; if I ever witness anything like that I will go after the perpetrator with (figuratively) guns blazing and tear a carcass-wide strip off their hide.

      • I( need not disclose the company, but at the beginning of the Pandemic, a big company-wide 'town hall' sort of online meeting focused on how to proceed through the (unknown then) new complications. And a big focus was on customer service, specifically muting the frustrations as front-line workers were being forced to work from home, unexpectedly, and with no real preparation. Lots of discussion on this. About 3/4 of the way through that give-and-take, a rep came on and asked what to do about customers who w

    • These are modern day self absorbed aristocrats. Drivers are their servants who dance for their lord's amusement lest they go without food. It's repulsive.

      Go. Outside. Buy your own damn food you morons! And stop using Amazon, you're only enabling them.

      • 0%, and not just a rounding error. of stuff is, for me, needed to get on AMZN.
        I buy more expensive, perhaps by a lot, from my local Wegmans.
        Or JC Penny for clothes
        Or even Exxon for gas.

        What editors like this should do is not complain about spelling when words are capitalized.
        Even ones that allow editing don't do that.

  • by hawguy ( 1600213 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @01:43PM (#62262221)

    I have a sign posted at my door asking drivers to leave packages in the bin I hid behind the bushes next to the door so the packages aren't easily visible from the street. About 25% do it -- UPS is the best at compliance.

    I don't have a sign requesting a dance, but I'd expect far fewer drivers to comply.

    • by Potor ( 658520 )
      If you have a sign posted, won't the baddies know where to look too?
      • by edis ( 266347 )

        aren't easily visible from the street

        so, one will not frequent this yard to check if the bin is empty, or not

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @02:00PM (#62262253)

        If you have a sign posted, won't the baddies know where to look too?

        The porch pirates won't go to the door unless they see a package from the street. They don't go to empty porches to look for notes on the door.

        • by Potor ( 658520 )
          If I were bold enough to be a porch pirate, I would check out notes on doors, which are always instructions, and often for delivery companies.
          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            Probably depends on whether the neighbours porch has visible packages. Thieves often seem to take the easiest course.

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      Donâ(TM)t I know it. I leave a note demand all those evangelicals who have nothing better to do than wander up and down the street harassing innocent families to leave $20 so I can have my porch steamed cleaned after they leave and turn themselves into the police for vagrancy. It still has not happened.
    • “Yeah I've seen that and all kinds of other requests,” a delivery company owner from the midwest told Motherboard. “Technically if the delivery associate doesn’t follow the instructions they can get dinged on their metrics for not doing so.”

      And it would be trival for a jerky Karen to post a complaint on drivers who don't dance and make something up, as Karen's are wont to do.

  • That's just another example of how low people have become, demanding unrealistic stuff and also posting the results online.
  • by TheNameOfNick ( 7286618 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @01:59PM (#62262247)

    If someone posts video of you without a model release, claim the ad revenue.

  • by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @02:10PM (#62262273)

    These people are prisoners of their own minds. Voyeurs trapped in their own security cell. So much of social media is unhealthy.

    • The excellent German movie Das Leben der Anderen / The Lives of Others is a must-see around voyeurism on behalf of the state security cell.
  • They’re on such a tight schedule that delays would cost them to be pealized. Plus, they’re drivers not some Karen’s entertainment.
  • by Dirk Becher ( 1061828 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @02:42PM (#62262339)

    Driver 1: "Those customers get lazier everyday. Why couldn't they have just send one order for both products?"
    Driver 2: "This might be a cause for concern..."
    Customer through speaker: "Round one...FIGHT!!!!"

  • by rantrantrant ( 4753443 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @02:45PM (#62262347)
    ...was abolished, & you fought a pretty bloody civil war over that one, 'Murcans have had to find other means to demean & exploit their fellow human beings. I guess Amazon are fulfilling a deeply felt need, a hole in their lives, gnawing at their souls from within. Blessed relief is here & you can strip workers of their dignity as a free gift with every Amazon order.
  • These people who are doing this are sick fuckers and are nothing more than the lowest form of attention seeking whores. They won't even do the fucking work themselves, but use threats to force overworked employees providing them a completely unrelated service in an attempt to make themselves famous. "Dance for me so I get social media likes or I will complain that you aren't doing your job" is twisted and evil. These people should be outed and banned from all social media forever. Fuck them and their tactic

    • Amazon should turn these accounts into having a signature required for delivery. Make the problem worse? maybe.
  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @03:20PM (#62262451)

    Fine. This is the war dance of my people.

  • This guy is complaining about his "packages" being thrown -- which in this case is a highly padded thin lightweight envelope, virtually impossible to harm by tossing it onto his porch.

    What a whiny little baby. Somebody ought to leave him a flaming bag of dog do to give him something to really complain about.

  • Pornography and the need to humiliate/bully people over data lines is what seems to drive technology.

    Enjoy your real doll and your monthly "box of bullshit".

    It has been a pleasure working with you.

  • Tape the ring doorbell, and then ????
  • I've seen a screenshot somewhere, a message from the customer to the delivery man, saying: “Could you please say ‘thank you for keeping me employed??’ to the Ring camera, please and thank you.”

    Some people just love to humiliate other people :-(
  • by Dr.Dubious DDQ ( 11968 ) on Sunday February 13, 2022 @02:33PM (#62264081) Homepage
    If we can get enough people to put "Join a union" in the delivery instructions, I'll bet Amazon would crack down on this sort of thing somewhat more quickly.
  • If you don't dance, the customer leaves a bad review for you and get fired.

    If you dance, that's time wasted and you fail to meet the number of deliveries per timeframe, and you get fired.

Our business in life is not to succeed but to continue to fail in high spirits. -- Robert Louis Stevenson

Working...