Walmart Confirms Chain-Wide Self-Checkout Glitch
Written by Evan SchumanWhen a picture of a Walmart self-checkout screen showing the wrong total for a purchase made its way around the Web this week, many assumed it had been altered or perhaps the screen had been captured the instant before an update. But Walmart has now confirmed that a software update impacted almost all of the chain’s self-checkout units for about two weeks, causing incorrect and confusing displays. The receipts and the amounts charged, however, were reportedly correct.
Sometime in mid-July, the machines were given a “routine update” via a blast from a Walmart server, said Walmart spokesperson Ashley Hardie.
“A recent update caused a display error. It did not impact the price charged to customers,” she said. “This issue has now been corrected, when we provided another update.”
Update: The day after Walmart said the matter was resolved, a report out of Michigan late on Wednesday (Aug. 1) found Walmart self-checkout systems to be down entirely while waiting for upgrades and “that it was affecting other Walmart stores across the country.” We are waiting to hear back from Walmart.
The nature of self-checkout makes this a relatively non-interruptive error; the receipt is the more important document. When customers do look at the screen as items are scanned, they are almost always checking to see if the item’s price is correct, as opposed to watching to see if the total grows by the correct amount. That said, for customers who did notice the strange screen readings, it probably didn’t make them confident the amount charged would be correct.
This is a potentially meaningful psychological issue with self-checkout. Even though the reliance on POS accuracy is just about the same with self-checkout as it is with an associate performing cashier duties (rare is the Walmart associate who will give any change amount other than what the POS tells them to, even if simple math makes it clearly wrong), the shopper’s perception of reliance on the system is much higher with self-checkout. Therefore, it’s much more of a problem to have this type of glitch in a self-checkout lane than a staffed lane, presuming the store’s objective is to move as many customers through lower cost self-checkout lanes as possible.
This incident is just what self-checkout needs right now. And it’s also a great argument for shoppers using their mobile devices to see real-time charges on their payment cards or bank debit cards.
August 6th, 2012 at 2:54 pm
This summer I found a cashier at Walmart that shorted me the change of a dollar or two.He corrected when I showed him the receipt and change.
As I am 67 yrs now, I have found I need to make sure I get a receipt and check the change as as I look old and senile.
In many ocasions I just use my debit card to avoid being shortchanged.Is this a smalltown localized practice targeting senile looking seniors? I doubt it.
I was a Social Investigator for Wayne Co Sheriff’s Dept years ago and counseled many criminals who did scams on seniors in particular. I am editor of Drug Culture Monopoly, which my clients explained how criminals hustle. In the 70’s it was called Horse is Boss.
So I know how criminals can operate.