It always makes me happy when a delivery or courier company provides ‘realtime’ tracking.

  • Suppose I were a nefarious criminal, and I want it to commit a low risk high reward crime, I would wait until boxing day / black Friday / big sale day and have me and a bunch of my friends order some items. Then track all the delivery trucks and rob them.

    •  Dave   ( @Dave@lemmy.nz ) 
      link
      fedilink
      113 months ago

      Let’s be honest, if you want to rob a delivery van, you don’t need to track them. Just hang out in a wealthy neighbourhood, and you’ll see one before long. Then jump them as they get out to deliver a package.

      Of course you don’t want to attack a GPS monitored one, as if you pick one without the monitoring you can just steal the van.

      I feel a bit weird giving you step by step instructions on how to do this 😆

      • Rebuttal: wealthy neighbourhoods have:

        • the most security cameras and, potentially, paparazzi.
        • the fastest police response times.
        • better detective work because the victims are actually people of ‘importance’.
        • possibly personal security

        All the vans have GPS for ‘productivity’ tracking of the employees. You’re better off unloading it.

        P.S. I don’t endorse criminal behaviour. This is all hypothetical :P

        • Hmm. I mentioned wealthy neighborhoods because they are more likely to be getting deliveries, and importantly, the stuff will be worth getting.

          You make a good point about security systems and general police interest. Maybe some middle class neighbourhood would be best.

          All the vans have GPS for ‘productivity’ tracking of the employees.

          Not sure if you’re from NZ or noticed this is an NZ community, but I believe a majority of couriers here are independent contractors who own their own vans and get paid by the number if packages they deliver. I feel like it would be easier to track them via a company issued phone, but also you can track their productivity via the number of packages delivered so I’m not sure the location helps.