. The
expects that it knows what you want before you even know you want it; it will purchase the item you want before it occurs to you to purchase it, and ship it preemptively:
See other reports
here and
here. As
Amazon walks an insidious line between psychological intrusion and arrogant clairvoyance, not one word is said about how intrusive and manipulative this is. The patent doesn't say it, but presumably the anticipatory ordering function will also reflect
Amazon processing previous buyers' personal information on social networks. Imagine if this concept, or something like it, was used by other businesses. Is a convenient service really worth so much? Why are all these initiatives accepted so passively by the public, with no regard for their larger implications?
Amazon additionally seeks to undercut the competition in shipping by setting up
drone deliveries which will ship your order in 30 minutes or less. The drone program is called
Amazon Prime Air. The program has a few years of R&D to go; it also has to pass Federal Aviation Authority regulations in the US. But on 7 March 2014, the
Daily Mail reported that a transport judge recently dismissed a
fine enforcing an FAA ban on commercial unmanned aircraft in the US.
One friend,
C., on hearing this, expected that people will shoot the drones down, steal their packages and sell the contents on
eBay, hence completing a near-perfect Internet Circle Of Life. In the meantime, sit tight and await the drones. Below the jump, see the drone package delivery promo video.