

Yeah, there’s definitely ways of tracking people even today. I just don’t really see it working at scale without the customer actively doing something to “opt in” to that kind of tracking system, like loyalty cards, connecting to the wifi, etc. Mind you, I’m just some nerd, so I could be wrong/missing something, but yeah lol



No, Canadian companies pull the same bullshit too. Consumer protection laws are little more than “agreements” that many companies are directly pulling out of. In particular with grocery stores, if Galen Weston (the owner of the largest family of grocery chains in the country) wants it, it happens. Look into the bread price fixing situation from a few years back. Nothing actually came of it on a legal front, aside from metaphorically smacking the companies on the nose with a rolled up newspaper and being told they’re being bad.