The rise of surveillance pricing
Source: westernstandard.news
TL;DR
- Grocers collect personal data to set individualized prices based on shopping habits and online activity.
- Consumer Reports found 75% of grocery items priced differently for shoppers, with basket totals varying up to $9.59 USD.
- This erodes fair pricing for food and prompts calls for regulation from NDP leader Avi Lewis and experts.
The story at a glance
Grocery stores and delivery services like Instacart use customer data and AI to adjust prices in real time, a practice called surveillance pricing. NDP leader Avi Lewis called for a national ban on Monday, while experts like Sylvain Charlebois argue it breaks the social contract on food pricing. The article explains how this works in stores and online, its history from social media data, and early Canadian responses. It draws on a recent Consumer Reports investigation and adoption of electronic shelf labels by chains like Walmart and Sobeys.
Key points
- Airlines, hotels, and ride-sharing have used data-driven dynamic pricing for years; now grocers are adopting it, including at physical stores via electronic shelf labels (ESLs).
- Consumer Reports tested Instacart shoppers from Safeway and Target: 75% of 400+ volunteers saw different prices for identical items, ranging from 7 cents to $2.56 USD per item, adding up to $1,200 yearly.
- Instacart used AI tool Eversight until December 2025 to gauge price sensitivity and boost profits by 2-5%; the practice continues elsewhere.
- Data collection started with "free" social media trading user info for targeted ads, now enhanced by AI like ChatGPT for first-party tracking.
- Manitoba's proposed Bill 49 would require disclosure of algorithmic pricing in retail transactions; no other provinces have acted.
- Sobeys plans ESL rollout by end of April; Walmart already uses them widely.
Details and context
Surveillance pricing relies on personal data from online activity, geolocation, and even smart devices to build profiles sold by data brokers. Algorithms process this to set or suggest prices that maximize profits by targeting what each customer will pay.
Electronic shelf labels let stores change prices instantly via apps, varying by time, location, or profile, without paper tags. This extends online practices to in-store shopping.
The shift accelerated with AI integration post-2022 ChatGPT launch, letting companies bypass third-party trackers. Charlebois notes it undermines food pricing's traditional predictability and fairness.[[1]](https://www.westernstandard.news/news/in-depth-the-rise-of-surveillance-pricing/72682)[[2]](https://www.westernstandard.news/news)
Key quotes
- Sylvain Charlebois: "If two people buy the same food, from the same store, at the same time, they should pay the same price. Full stop."
- Sylvain Charlebois: "If pricing experiments exist, consumers should be told. And if fairness cannot be guaranteed for essential goods, regulators should intervene—decisively."
Why it matters
Surveillance pricing lets retailers charge more to those deemed less price-sensitive, challenging uniform pricing norms for essentials like groceries. Consumers could face higher bills without knowing why, while businesses gain profit edges from personal data. Watch for federal action following NDP calls or provincial laws like Manitoba's, though no bans exist yet.