• Presi300
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    1096 days ago

    Custom 0%

    It ain’t my job to pay your employees salaries

    1000000538

    • Flying Squid
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      186 days ago

      Maybe it’s your job to avoid patronizing places that don’t pay their employees enough though?

      • Presi300
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        6 days ago

        No, it’s not, however as a near-minimum wage worker myself, it is also not my job to cover a massive corporation’s lack of proper budgeting…

        • Flying Squid
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          -36 days ago

          If you keep patronizing such businesses, why would they ever do that? They know they don’t have to in order to get your money. And it is the same with your own near-minimum wage job. You are working against your own best interests. Nothing will change while people are willing to give their money to companies that don’t pay their workers a fair wage.

          • Presi300
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            156 days ago

            Don’t get me wrong, I have nothing against tipping if the person did a good job, but a company trying to guilt trip me into giving them a mandatory tip? Nah, that’s bullshit, it’s essentially “Oh, we can’t pay our employees enough, would you mind helping 🥺”. Outta here with that.

            • Flying Squid
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              26 days ago

              Right,so don’t use those businesses. You give them no reason to do anything differently.

              All you are doing is helping to maintain the status quo.

              • @[email protected]
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                76 days ago

                I think it is the case of “you think in the right direction, but you don’t do it all the way, so now I’m gonna attack you over this until you stop doing anything”.

                Not paying tips is a good start.

                • Flying Squid
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                  26 days ago

                  Can you give an example of that ever working? Because boycotts sure as fuck work.

                • @[email protected]
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                  06 days ago

                  Rewarding the employer for underpaying the employees is not, in any way, the right direction, though? Not tipping is just telling the employees “I don’t care if you get paid, so long as I get what I want”

                • @LotrOrc
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                  06 days ago

                  How? Those people just aren’t going to get the money. Its not like the company is going to pay them extra because you didnt tip. Theyve already decided that the wage will be low Your logic doesn’t really make sense

              • Presi300
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                26 days ago

                I would not, that’s… what I’m trying to imply here… Yeah, businesses who don’t pay their employees enough bad.

              • Victor
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                6 days ago

                You don’t get it, I think? The point is to get the workers to quit or protest because they don’t get paid enough, so that the place can increase the prices instead so they can pay their workers. If the place is still providing a nice service or good food or whatever it may be, you don’t want it to go out of business. Just make a worker-positive change.

                • Flying Squid
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                  56 days ago

                  It takes everyone to fix these issues. It is not a one-sided job. Every time you give these establishments money, you help them.

                  And there is no shortage of replacement waiters out there for the ones who quit.

                • @Demdaru
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                  36 days ago

                  Most people won’t quit, especially in the US from what I know. If they are already underpaid, how can they quit? And if pretty much every place treats waiters the same, what choice do they have?

      • @[email protected]
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        56 days ago

        I absolutely will pick the no-tips place given a choice, but I take issue with that wording. Basically every business pays as little as possible, by design.

        • Flying Squid
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          26 days ago

          “As little as possible” and “not enough” are two different things.

          • @[email protected]
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            6 days ago

            I suppose, but it’s really hard to separate. You have to pick a cutoff, which in the face of a world full of intangible wealth and costs is hard, and then if you come out with a number that’s too high you basically have nowhere you can shop.

            There’s select industries that are super shitty, and I avoid those, but paying minimum wage for unskilled labour is a normal industry. (And, ironically, a lot of the fair-ethical-organic type businesses are super shitty themselves, because everyone wants to get paid extra and some will do horrible things to make that happen)

            • Flying Squid
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              26 days ago

              You’re saying this like it’s necessary to eat in restaurants with waiters. It isn’t. It’s a luxury.

              • @[email protected]
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                16 days ago

                Wait, where are you? I thought I recognised you from .ca, but it sounds like you might be thinking of the US system where they can pay nothing except tips. In my province you earn at least minimum wage as a waiter, and tips.

                If I were to just straight up refuse to eat from restaurants under any circumstance, I’d be heavily incurring those intangible costs I mentioned, because it’s an expected social thing. That being said, I might consider it if I was in the US, but I’m not.

                Also, tips have expanded well beyond servers, but that’s kind of beside the point.

                • Flying Squid
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                  5 days ago

                  Well you thought wrong. I was born and raised in the U.S. and lived there until about two weeks ago when we fled.

                  And in my 47 years in America, I was never in a situation where I couldn’t say, “no thanks” if someone invited me to a restaurant. And who invites you to restaurants and makes you pay?

          • @[email protected]
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            15 days ago

            I would happily pay more for my meal if it meant I didn’t have to tip. The benefit we get from not tipping is marginal compared to the benefit restaurant owners get by not paying living wage. Not to mention it’s added stress to the actual people doing the work because they don’t even get the guarantee of a decent paycheck.

            And there is a choice, you chose to perpetuate the system that grossly exploits the laborer, I choose to have minimal participation in such a system. Want to take a guess which of the two actually has a chance to fix the system?

              • @[email protected]
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                5 days ago

                But you are defending the system. You’re literally saying if you end up in a place that expects tipping then you should tip. What if you’re going out with a group and that group decides to go somewhere that expects tipping? Are you supposed to remove yourself from the group so you wouldn’t go into a place like that?

                You can’t take this black and white stance where if you end up participating in this system you also have to perpetuate that system. Making the customer feel like they’re responsible for the livelihood of the staff is how this tipping culture is kept alive and that is exactly what you’re doing right now. You’re trying to claim we are responsible for their livelihood simply because we stepped into the restaurant and ate.

      • @Woht24
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        -26 days ago

        Certainly not lol, what a ridiculous thing to say

  • @[email protected]
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    225 days ago

    It doesn’t have to be like this, America. Not only is tipping not expected in Australia, but when the “Choose tip” screen comes up on US made software, all the servers I’ve ever had skip straight through it and choose zero.

    Servers deserve to be paid fairly.

    • sunzu2
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      35 days ago

      “Choose tip” screen comes up on US made software

      US corpo parasite is attempting to export this shite so they can charge their parasite fee on higher gross amount…

      Pathetic

  • @[email protected]
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    1507 days ago

    If you can’t afford living wages for your staff so they’re not dependant on tips, your store shouldn’t be open.

    • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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      7 days ago

      Everyone working a job should be making a living wage. “Oh, but then the price of my McDonald’s cheeseburger will skyrocket!!” Fucking good. If it’s not economical to produce a product without abusing people, that product shouldn’t exist. Period. I will die on this hill.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 days ago

        “Oh, but then the price of my McDonald’s cheeseburger will skyrocket!!” Fucking good

        I don’t know why people keep repeating this propaganda. Plenty of countries pay actual wages to their employees, don’t have tipping, and the prices are still fucking cheaper than America.

        • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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          167 days ago

          Apologies, I’m not trying to say that that argument is true or has any basis in reality, more so that the argument is completely irrelevant

        • @[email protected]
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          47 days ago

          regardless, it doesn’t matter if people are already forced to tip. it just means you’re already paying more but it’s just not included in the sticker price

      • @SkyezOpen
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        157 days ago

        They did away with most of their staff and their prices went up over 100% over the last 5 years or so anyway. It’s corporate greed all the way down.

      • Diplomjodler
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        6 days ago

        Paying people a living wage would only increase the price by pennies. This is just another “conservative” talking point without any basis in reality.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 days ago

          What’s stopping McDonald’s from just saying that they need to increase prices by significantly more than that to accommodate the increased wages? Y’know, with lies? It happened with groceries, so I can imagine them seeing this as a good excuse to try to squeeze some more profit out.

          • @Zannsolo
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            26 days ago

            That already happened

          • @[email protected]
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            16 days ago

            Still having customers. Groceries are a basic need, but fast food is a luxury most people are already wanting to cut back anyway. I have been a fan of McChickens for a long time due to them being so cheap. They don’t taste amazing, but they got the job done, and were pretty much the cheapest protein I could get without having to make something myself. Even now, without any additional price hikes, they are now $3.50 for a single McChicken in my area. I cannot justify spending that, so I have completely stopped going to McDonalds. Since all other fast food has already done this before McDonalds, I no longer eat any fast food. They’ve all lost the only quality that made them worth while. Anecdotally, most people I know who did eat fast food don’t anymore due to prices. The higher they go, the more customers they will lose.

      • AwesomeLowlander
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        7 days ago

        There’s no hill to assault, I don’t think anybody except the abusers (and the profiteers) disagree with you.

        • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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          6 days ago

          You’d be surprised. In this specific example, many people believe such jobs are meant only for high schoolers and anyone else in that job is too stupid or lazy to do better and therefore don’t deserve better.

      • @postmateDumbass
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        87 days ago

        Hamburgling used to be a decent profession. Now with such cheap burgers all those skilled workers are left out.

      • Victor
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        46 days ago

        I wonder how many damn products we use on a daily basis that have been produced with some level of abuse along the production chain. Probably easier to count the ones without abuse, eh.

        • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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          26 days ago

          I agree completely, but I still stand by my original point.

          • Victor
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            26 days ago

            Oh for sure. My comment wasn’t meant to undermine your point. Ideally there would be no abuse whatsoever, that should be the minimum baseline. I stand by your point with you, friend.

  • Elsie
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    1537 days ago

    If any place said a 30% tip is so so, I’m not tipping.

    • @finitebanjo
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      387 days ago

      If I saw this I would give them exactly what I think they’re worth. $0.01 and a bad online review.

      • @YarHarSuperstar
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        16 days ago

        If you said “$.02 (point oh two) and a bad online review” it would’ve had an extra layer and sounded cooler while rhyming.

        • @finitebanjo
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          16 days ago

          Yes but it would undercut how absolutely dead serious I was about it.

          My main issue isn’t even the amounts but the labels. The recipient might think $30 is SoSo but it might be everything the giver has. It might also just be a pathetic pittance to the giver.

  • Phoenixz
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    727 days ago

    This would be an automatic “custom” > 0% for me. Sorry, not sorry.

  • Redex
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    286 days ago

    This would get an immediate Custom -> 0% from me the moment I see it.

    Fucking “soso” for a 20% tip the hell

    • @cley_faye
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      146 days ago

      As a dev I would try negative value in the custom field.

    • @[email protected]
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      45 days ago

      If this is in a restaurant after I’ve eaten, it would get 0% and I’d never go there again.
      If this is presented to me somewhere you pay before consuming your food/purchase, I’m leaving without paying.

    • @[email protected]
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      46 days ago

      They know there’s soft, weak people like me that find it painful because the guy in front of you can see it. I mean, I’m a good principled person and I’ve still done it, but I felt like trash in the process.

      I guess it was just a matter of time before other classes than the bottom one figured out aggressive panhandling.

      • sunzu2
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        15 days ago

        but I felt like trash in the process.

        the corpo knows, thats why it does it. don’t let corpo punk you like that.

    • @Woht24
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      46 days ago

      Yeah it’s disgusting

    • @[email protected]
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      5 days ago

      Man I’d leave a 1% tip just in case someone sees it and realizes that it was on purpose because I’m annoyed with the UX

      Also, holy hell, am I glad to live in a country that doesn’t do tipping*. It was a bit weird going to the US and not knowing when to tip and when not to, but I doubt I’ll be revisiting y’all in the next 4 years anyway :(

      *At restaurants with table service, it’s considered polite, but not necessary, to tip, if you enjoyed the experience.

  • Steve Dice
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    547 days ago

    Select “Custom” and type 0.00 without breaking eye contact. Be careful, though, that 0.00 can quickly turn into 8.88 if you’re not looking.

    • @negativeyoda
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      46 days ago

      You really think it’s the owner and not some poor, underpaid schmuck manning the register?

      • Steve Dice
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        96 days ago

        Yeah, it’s definitely the owner’s fault. That doesn’t change the fact that the underpaid schmuck always tries to blame the customer for not leaving a tip.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 days ago

          The awkwardness here actually works in favour of abolishing tips and replacing them with the pay being factored into higher prices.

          No one wants to be the sucker - human nature is that people are generous if they think everyone else is generous, but if they feel that others are not ‘pulling their weight’ on generosity and are instead taking advantage, that’s the fastest way to dry up other people’s generosity. Right-wing media use this fact to undermine support for social welfare - e.g. if 0.001% of welfare payments are fraudulently taken, they set editorial policy that makes it seem like beneficiaries are rorting the system instead of being truly needy.

          But when it comes to tipping, the dynamic actually works the other way - people feel generous by tipping, even though it is harmful long term. If a few people ahead of someone in the line don’t tip, should they be the sucker who does tip? And for the employee, you want them to be the advocate on the inside for forcing people to pay their share instead of taking advantage - by having the displayed price be the total upfront price that includes the compensation for employees, instead of an optional tip.

  • @scarabic
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    487 days ago

    This was at a self-service kiosk, too, right?

    • kamen
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      26 days ago

      That means the tip goes to the customer, right?

      /s

  • @[email protected]
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    105 days ago

    This is why I have stopped dining out, if the business demands excess to then pay staff and without tips staff go unpaid then what is it I am supporting.

  • @Vinstaal0
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    186 days ago

    The moment they ask for a tip they are not getting anything nor a repeat customer.

    • @[email protected]
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      126 days ago

      Presenting the possibility to tip on the screen is ok, I think. The tone (and from my European perspective the percentages) is, what I find weird.

      • @[email protected]
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        56 days ago

        I agree, the %s are too high, and there should be a “no tip” option there (even though you should tip here especially full service but not counter service), but also the “30% soso?!” Even I’m not tipping this one.

  • @hOrni
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    126 days ago

    30% is “soso” but a 100% is only “Thank You”? In this case the 100% should be “Walk over to the other side of the register so the boss can blow You”.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 days ago

    I frequent a bagel place that automatically adds a fairly hefty (not THAT hefty) tip when you pre-order online for in-store pickup.

    If not for the fact that they are by far the best place to go for bagels in my area (we have few choices), that alone would stop me from ordering.

    Their bagels are good, and I’m not above tipping at a bagel place. But their prices are already very high for a bagel place (they know what they got), they do brisk business, and they should damn well be paying their employees more rather than trying to sneak a 25% tip into every online order. It doesn’t even present it as in OP - it’s just there in the itemization in the end and you need to manually edit it out before ordering.

    Edt - oh and if real, I ain’t never going back to the place in OP after seeing that one time.

  • @[email protected]
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    86 days ago

    I don’t mind paying for the convenience. I tip well. I do wish we lived in a country where living wages were a thing. But we don’t. We’re a giant slave colony owned by like 5 megacorps.

    My question here is, how much was the bill? 5 or $600?