this post was submitted on 24 Oct 2024
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Privacy

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Okay the title is a bit exaggerated, but honestly not far off. This post is very mundane and a bit long, but thought it fits the community.

I'm visiting my home country and went shopping for pants, there were "30% off everything!" signs with a tiny text underneath that said "member discount" (don't have membership). Not a problem, did not notice and I don't care for such marketing tricks to get you into the store but okay.

Picked up couple of pants, went to the cashier and they asked me "do you have our membership?" - I answered no and expected the follow up question whether I'd like to join, but, to my positive surprise the cashier just happily responded "okay, not a problem!" and continued to bag my stuff.

I stood ready to pay and then the cashier said "now I just need your phone number and you can pay". Hold up. What. I did not expect that, I honestly had a burst of anger inside me (never gonna take it on a cashier, they are just doing their job). I asked nicely why do I need to give my phone number and I was told that to register me as a member so I can get the discount.

I declined and said I don't want to join and would like to just pay.

The entire interaction after questioning why they need my phone number was awkward, as if I had been the first person to decline, the weirdo, aluminum foil hat wearing hermit.

This was just one of many interactions in the recent years that make me feel as if I was a weirdo for not sharing all my info around. The worst is when everyone keeps telling me "its just an app, just download it and use that why do you make things complicated" or "just sign up you don't need to pay anything".

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[–] [email protected] 9 points 7 hours ago (2 children)

I realized a few years ago that my GF inadvertently solved this issue for me: She likes registering for anything that provides a discount, so I use her phone number.

"Are you a member?"
"Nope, but my GF probably is..", and 90% of the time I am correct.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 7 hours ago

When I was younger and lived at home we had "family accounts". When I went to a store I picked up the "family card" and used that. So similar experience!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 hours ago

My wife is the same way. She doesn't care so I just use her phone number for everything. But then she wonders why she gets more spam calls than me...

[–] [email protected] 9 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

I asked nicely why do I need to give my phone number and I was told that to register me as a member so I can get the discount.

I declined and said I don’t want to join and would like to just pay.

I've just said "I don't have one" when asked this for awhile. This never seems the phase the cashiers, I'm guessing they know what that really means. Half the time I still get whatever discount, though I've never tried to sign up for a membership saying that.

If it's an online form my phone number is just (local area code)555–5555. I've never had that not take, except for one case where it automatically enabled 2-factor auth and I had to create a new account.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 7 hours ago

Damn, should've tried that! Thanks for the tip!

[–] [email protected] 7 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

Here it's similar. I've found out that if to the question

do you have our membership?

I respond "No, thank you", they often understand correctly and don't assume I want to set one up

[–] [email protected] 3 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

Now I know! I was positively surprised when they didn't ask the follow-up question, but I see now they have been trained to not ask it at all.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 hours ago (1 children)

To be fair to the cashier, they were just trying to do something nice for you and getting you a free discount. I doubt that any "training" was involved, they probably didn't think that anyone would refuse to give a phone number for a discount.

Most people wouldn't care, but I used to get so any spam calls that it wasn't worth the risk anymore.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 hours ago (2 children)

You made me question myself now, was I being unreasonable?

Didn't even think that the clerk might have been just trying to help me out, I felt like this was a smart sales & marketing psychological trick to give up and go the way of least resistance to get me to sign up (obviously not by the clerk directly, but as part of their training on how to deal with customers).

But either way, thankfully I was polite and nice about it. I might have become too cynical about everything regarding my private info in the last few years.

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