Loading...
🍪

En poursuivant votre navigation sur ce site, vous acceptez l'utilisation de Cookies qui garantissent son bon fonctionnement.

enEnglish
frFrench
esSpanish
zhChinese
jaJapanese
koKorean
hiHindi
deGerman
noNorwegian
Recherche article
Me connecter
Fleche top bulle Fleche top bulle
DE EN ES FR HI JA KO NO ZH

An Amazon delivery driver cheats the system

Publié le 30 Avril 2026

Information

Video published by Joenathan's happy fun time channel

Yep, there are scumbags everywhere, Amazon included. The delivery driver places the package on the doorstep, takes the photo to justify the delivery in the computer system, then picks the packages back up, steals them and leaves.

Clearly, this video also shows how absurd Amazon’s verification system is, because it proves absolutely nothing... It would probably be simpler to equip every driver with a bodycam (like the police), with a manager uploading each employee’s day to a server every evening. At least then we could be sure the work was spotless.

Because, quietly, this driver triggers a whole cascade of actions.
If the customer did not have a camera on the porch, he would be arguing with Amazon customer service, but he could also request a police investigation for parcel theft.
Then the police, investigating those very common parcel thefts, would probably disturb a number of neighbors, and so on.

Personally, I think dismissal would not be enough for this thug; he should at least be fined for theft of property.

Unfortunately, with current delivery systems, we are forced to put far too much trust in delivery drivers. I can’t wait for these deliveries to be handled by drones or automatic cars.

The ideal would be for every home to have a secure landing area reserved for deliveries, allowing drones to make fully autonomous round trips between a nearby depot and the delivery location.

Tags
Amazon
delivery driver
delivery
thug
theft
parcel
thief
system
drone
personal drone landing pad
autonomous delivery
robot
trust
Envoyer à un ami
Signaler cet article
A propos de l'auteur

An Amazon delivery driver cheats the system

Publié le 30 Avril 2026

Information

Video published by Joenathan's happy fun time channel

Yep, there are scumbags everywhere, Amazon included. The delivery driver places the package on the doorstep, takes the photo to justify the delivery in the computer system, then picks the packages back up, steals them and leaves.

Clearly, this video also shows how absurd Amazon’s verification system is, because it proves absolutely nothing... It would probably be simpler to equip every driver with a bodycam (like the police), with a manager uploading each employee’s day to a server every evening. At least then we could be sure the work was spotless.

Because, quietly, this driver triggers a whole cascade of actions.
If the customer did not have a camera on the porch, he would be arguing with Amazon customer service, but he could also request a police investigation for parcel theft.
Then the police, investigating those very common parcel thefts, would probably disturb a number of neighbors, and so on.

Personally, I think dismissal would not be enough for this thug; he should at least be fined for theft of property.

Unfortunately, with current delivery systems, we are forced to put far too much trust in delivery drivers. I can’t wait for these deliveries to be handled by drones or automatic cars.

The ideal would be for every home to have a secure landing area reserved for deliveries, allowing drones to make fully autonomous round trips between a nearby depot and the delivery location.

Tags
Amazon
delivery driver
delivery
thug
theft
parcel
thief
system
drone
personal drone landing pad
autonomous delivery
robot
trust
Envoyer à un ami
Signaler cet article
A propos de l'auteur

An Amazon delivery driver cheats the system

Publié le 30 Avril 2026

Information

Video published by Joenathan's happy fun time channel

Yep, there are scumbags everywhere, Amazon included. The delivery driver places the package on the doorstep, takes the photo to justify the delivery in the computer system, then picks the packages back up, steals them and leaves.

Clearly, this video also shows how absurd Amazon’s verification system is, because it proves absolutely nothing... It would probably be simpler to equip every driver with a bodycam (like the police), with a manager uploading each employee’s day to a server every evening. At least then we could be sure the work was spotless.

Because, quietly, this driver triggers a whole cascade of actions.
If the customer did not have a camera on the porch, he would be arguing with Amazon customer service, but he could also request a police investigation for parcel theft.
Then the police, investigating those very common parcel thefts, would probably disturb a number of neighbors, and so on.

Personally, I think dismissal would not be enough for this thug; he should at least be fined for theft of property.

Unfortunately, with current delivery systems, we are forced to put far too much trust in delivery drivers. I can’t wait for these deliveries to be handled by drones or automatic cars.

The ideal would be for every home to have a secure landing area reserved for deliveries, allowing drones to make fully autonomous round trips between a nearby depot and the delivery location.

Tags
Amazon
delivery driver
delivery
thug
theft
parcel
thief
system
drone
personal drone landing pad
autonomous delivery
robot
trust
Envoyer à un ami
Signaler cet article
A propos de l'auteur
30 April 2026 11:50:04

A drone flies over Shenzhen

InformationVideo published by Drone China   This magnificent video shows us drone footage above the city of Shenzhen in China. A modern and beautiful city with a science-fiction feel in these images. I do not know whether the footage was heavily edited, but it is good work.  
Read more
30 April 2026 16:01:51

High-quality drone video montage

InformationVideo published by kold This video features a series of clips filmed from a drone in high-quality 4K. Really well made, accompanied by music from "Jain" — here are 3 minutes of pure pleasure :)
Read more