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Showing posts with label gift cards. Show all posts

AI-Powered Shopping Is Transforming How Consumers Buy Holiday Gifts

 

Artificial intelligence is emerging with a new dimension in holiday shopping for consumers, going beyond search capabilities into a more proactive role in exploration and decision-making. Rather than endlessly clicking through online shopping sites, consumers are increasingly turning to AI-powered chatbots to suggest gift ideas, compare prices, and recommend specialized products they may not have thought of otherwise. Such a trend is being fueled by the increasing availability of technology such as Microsoft Copilot, ChatGPT from OpenAI, and Gemini from Google. With basic information such as a few elements of a gift receiver’s interest, age, or hobbies, personalized recommendations can be obtained which will direct such a person to specialized retail stores or distinct products. 

Such technology is being viewed increasingly as a means of relieving a busy time of year with thoughtfulness in gift selection despite being rushed. Industry analysts have termed this year a critical milestone in AI-enabled commerce. Although figures quantifying expenditures driven by AI are not available, a report by Salesforce reveals that AI-enabled activities have the potential to impact over one-twentieth of holiday sales globally, amounting to an expenditure in the order of hundreds of billions of dollars. Supportive evidence can be derived from a poll of consumers in countries such as America, Britain, and Ireland, where a majority of them have already adopted AI assistance in shopping, mainly for comparisons and recommendations. 

Although AI adoption continues to gain pace, customer satisfaction with AI-driven retail experiences remains a mixed bag. With most consumers stating they have found AI solutions to be helpful, they have not come across experiences they find truly remarkable. Following this, retailers have endeavored to improve product representation in AI-driven recommendations. Experts have cautioned that inaccurate or old product information can work against them in AI-driven recommendations, especially among smaller brands where larger rivals have an advantage in resources. 

The technology is also developing in other ways beyond recommenders. Some AI firms have already started working on in-chat checkout systems, which will enable consumers to make purchases without leaving the chat interface. OpenAI has started to integrate in-checkout capabilities into conversations using collaborations with leading platforms, which will allow consumers to browse products and make purchases without leaving chat conversations. 

However, this is still in a nascent stage and available on a selective basis to vendors approved by AI firms. The above trend gives a cause for concern with regards to concentration in the market. Experts have indicated that AI firms control gatekeeping, where they get to show which retailers appear on the platform and which do not. Those big brands with organized product information will benefit in this case, but small retailers will need to adjust before being considered. On the other hand, some small businesses feel that AI shopping presents an opportunity rather than a threat. Through their investment in quality content online, small businesses hope to become more accessible to AI shopping systems without necessarily partnering with them. 

As AI shopping continues to gain popularity, it will soon become important for a business to organize information coherently in order to succeed. Although AI-powered shopping assists consumers in being better informed and making better decisions, overdependence on such technology can prove counterproductive. Those consumers who do not cross-check the recommendations they receive will appear less well-informed, bringing into focus the need to balance personal acumen with technology in a newly AI-shaped retail market.

Scam Spotter Warns the American Public of a Gift Card Scam

 

A cyber-security platform has come up with a humorous approach to alert Americans about gift card scams ahead of the Christmas season. With its new awareness campaign geared at thwarting scammers' complicated con efforts, Scam Spotter, a platform established by Cybercrime Support Network (CSN) with support from Google, is sounding the warning to consumers ahead of the busy shopping season. 

A grandma steals a helicopter and breaks into a jail in a foreign country to set her granddaughter free using gift cards as a bail payment in one Hollywood blockbuster-style dramatization. In another, a man narrowly avoids an armed police raid on his home after paying his tax debt with gift cards over the phone. "Your computer has been hacked," "you've been pre-approved for a loan," and "it's your boss – I need you to buy gift cards ASAP" are among the fraud tactics used in other commercials. 

A spokesperson for the Scam Spotter platform said: “This comprehensive campaign highlights the most common gift card scam scenarios in a series of absurd and hyperbolic videos to show that if the stories scammers use sound unbelievable, it’s because they are.” 

Scams are more common than many people know, and they've progressed far beyond the unlikely "Nigerian Prince" call, with the fraud industry being worth more than $3.3 billion every year. Scammers feed on people's fears and catch them off guard by using more personal methods of communication, such as a direct message on social media. They accomplish by creating "urgent" situations and instilling terror in their victims, making them feel compelled to act immediately without a chance to think. People are typically overwhelmed with embarrassment after being cheated, and they don't report or talk about it, leaving others vulnerable to fall for the same fraud. 

Gift cards have topped the list of reported fraud payment methods every year since 2018, according to the Federal Trade Commission. People reported losing roughly $245 million during that time, with a median individual loss of $840. 

Scams involving gift cards target people of all ages. “While baby boomers tend to lose more money per scam on average, younger generations are far from safe, with millennials reporting losses of around $300m in 2020,” said a Scam Spotter spokesperson. In its 2021 Holiday Shopping Forecast, global branded payments provider Blackhawk Network anticipated that gift card spending will rise by 27% this year.

Security Flaw in Nordstrom Gift Cards Revealed by Security Expert

Cybersecurity expert Jim Stickley has found a flaw in the Nordstrom gift cards that allows hackers to drain money from the card by pulling the pins from the website.

He demonstrated the same in an interview with TODAY by hacking a $50 gift card from Nordstrom.

According to Stickley, the Nordstrom cards have shorter PINs and had no protection from bots, which has made this method of hacking possible. He added that this was the reason why Nordstrom cards are especially susceptible to hacking.

The flaw has since been fixed after NBC News brought it to the retailer’s attention.

“Our customers are always our top priority, and if we learn they were negatively impacted by an issue with our gift card systems, we'd work quickly to take care of them,” the company said. “We have a number of gift card security controls in place, and a team of experts that regularly test, review and enhance those controls."

According to National Retail Federation, Americans are expected to spend more than $27.6 million on gift cards this year.