They could also be tracking a person. That is if that person continues to keep the package near him after the delivery?
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We buy a lot through Amazon and others and recycle the packaging, boxes and air cushions. What we can reuse in our business, we do, including the interior elements. What we can’t use gets burned. What isn’t immediately used/destroyed lives in our shop until needed. We also sometimes use boxes from a friend’s business.
All junk mail goes to the dump or burn pile ASAP.
I believe it would be too confusing to use deliveries as a human tracking device as they are fungible.
I think Delivery Boy was a straight-forward appellation meant to emphasize the the USPS is a low-level servant for Amazon, implying Amazon disrespects the USPS.
I do the same thing, re-using a lot of boxes. Not at the commercial level, of course.
I think that the only thing they really track is the delivery point and time. Once the package is scanned as delivered, the place and time is recorded in their scanning device and they go on their merry way. I would say that it can be used to track the mail carrier more than anything else. And, of course, the package. But once it’s delivered, it’s generally out of the postal service’s hands.
.when delivered the innocent person puts the item bought near him in his office..etc. or wear the Fitbit etc..who's to say the evil doers can't then listen and track the person?
The Canadian Prime Minister says he is willing to renegotiate NAFTA and the US Postal Service says they will renegotiate their deal with Amazon. Two more wins for the president. It’s just incredible, really. I’ve never seen anything like it
https://twitter.com/1776Stonewall/status/981924444829573125?s=19