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BTR1701 <atropos@mac.com> wrote:Maybe as Covid officially retreats, we're less apt to pay for delivery.On Jul 12, 2023 at 9:53:27 PM PDT, "BTR1701" <atropos@mac.com> wrote:item off the shelf, take it to an available self-checkout register, scan
>\- rantfront
>
Lately I've been noticing the proliferation of tip jars and tip prompts just
about everywhere. You're now expected to tip the McDonald's guy who slides
your burger bag across the counter to you, for gawd's sake.
>
I was at a place called Souplantation, which is basically one huge
40-yard-long salad bar. You take a tray and a plate when you walk in thedoor, you walk down the salad bar and add ingredients to your salad along thecup
way, if you want one of the soups, you grab a bowl and fill it, you take aand fill it from the machine for your drink, and at the end there's a scalebut
that weighs your items and a cashier to ring it up based on weight. And sure
enough, there was a tip jar there and when I paid by card, I got a prompt
asking me to leave a tip with choices 20%, 25%, and 30%.
>
For what?
>
I literally did *everything* myself. I made my own salad, I poured my own
drink, I ladled my own soup, I got my own condiments, yet I'm supposed to add
anywhere from 20% to 30% extra onto my bill to tip the guy who did nothingpush *one* button on his register to total up my order's weight?were
>
And as if this wasn't bad enough, now I'm starting to see signs like this in
restaurants around town:
>
>https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/6egz5eom3pc2n503ldusl/Tips.png?rlkey=h8sjxno4581t1hmqmvtvuc08q&dl=0>
Restaurants are charging a percentage to use your credit card. Maybe theyalready secretly doing this, but I've never seen one boldly state that you>
will be charged an extra 3% for not paying cash.
>
Customers are not supposed to be paying the credit card processing fee. In
many cases, it's against the merchant agreement.
>
Know how people will fix this problem? They’ll take the 3% from the server's
tip. Which means the servers are going to ultimately be the ones who get
screwed.
>
-/ rant
Now the robot at the automated convenience store wants a tip, too.
>
You go in the store, there are literally no employees anywhere, you pick your
it,
swipe your card, and you're presented with a screen that asks if you
want to
leave a tip with various amount choices, starting at 20%.>that owns the store? Because hell no.
Leave a tip for who? There are no employees here. Am I tipping the corporation>everything myself.
Leave a tip for what? No service was provided to me. I did literally>going to start asking for tips, too.
The store is literally just a giant vending machine. I wonder when those are>Uber rides just upped the suggested tip from two dollars to three dollars
starting on the theory that you won’t go into the override menu and spend
the time knocking it back down to two dollars I guess.
But on the other hand, the grocery delivery services just cut their
suggested tips in half! I don’t get that at all.
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