Your favorite mall may be spying on you
Retailers are always trying to understand more about their customers. But how far is too far when it comes to learning about your shopping habits?
By Credit.com
This post comes from Shelby Bremer at partner site Credit.com.
Retailers are always trying to understand more about their customers’ habits.
Companies want to know what kinds of products you buy, how you purchase them, and why you buy, presumably so they can more effectively market to you.
But how far is too far when it comes to obtaining information about your shopping habits?
Companies want to know what kinds of products you buy, how you purchase them, and why you buy, presumably so they can more effectively market to you.
But how far is too far when it comes to obtaining information about your shopping habits?
Retailers have long been devising ways to track consumer behavior, from security cameras to undercover shoppers.
But technological advances have enabled many malls to recently implement cellphone tracking systems for more precision and accuracy in their research.
In some malls, your behavior throughout the entire shopping complex may be monitored, from where you go to how long you stay there. Antennae installed throughout the mall collect data from individual phones to track movement, providing insight into traffic by store, time, entrance and day.
Representatives of both retail centers and tech companies alike posit that personal information (like phone numbers, names, or purchases) is not collected.
Rather, the companies say, consumer behavior such as where they walk and how long they stay is documented.
But critics say that this system, which tracks consumers by individual identification numbers unique to each phone, is an invasion of privacy and a violation of consumer rights.
The two shopping centers managed by Forest City both suspended use of this system in 2011 after Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) raised privacy concerns in a statement, saying, “Personal cellphones are just that -- personal.
Though this prompted the cancellation of this system for those two malls, there are currently no regulations in place for consumers to be notified of a tracking system as they shop.
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