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To beat porch thieves, Amazon slips packages in car trunks

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Reuters
Reuters
Reuters is an international news organisation owned by Thomson Reuters

Not content to stop at slipping packages inside customers’ front doors, Amazon.com on Tuesday started a new program to deliver packages to its members’ parked cars.

The world’s largest online retailer is rolling the program out in 37 U.S. cities for customers with newer compatible vehicles and plans to expand the service. All that is required to have packages delivered to a car is downloading an app from Amazon and linking it to the vehicle’s so-called connected car service, such as General Motors’s OnStar system or Volvo AG’s On Call service. (Details: www.amazon.com/keyincar)

The in-car delivery effort is part of Amazon’s drive to leave packages where they cannot be easily stolen. Since 2011, Amazon has offered secure lockers for urban customers.

The in-car service builds on an effort Amazon launched last fall called Amazon Key. That system uses a $220 combination of an internet-connected door lock and camera to allow Amazon delivery drivers to place packages inside the homes of members of Amazon Prime. By contrast, the in-car delivery service is free for Prime members. It will be offered in San Francisco, Seattle, Atlanta, Nashville, Milwaukee, Salt Lake City, Washington, D.C. and other areas.

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The in-home delivery option put Amazon in direct competition with so-called smart home security companies such as Alphabet’s Nest Labs and presaged company $1 billion acquisition of connected doorbell maker Ring.

But the new in-car delivery service may have broader reach because it works with many compatible cars from Chevrolet, Buick, GMC, Cadillac and Volvo, with plans to deliver to more makes and models in the future.

In a statement, GM said there are at least 7 million owners of compatible GM models. Company has not disclosed how many customers have tried its Amazon Key in-home service.

In-car delivery also gives Amazon an in-between option for customers who might want a more secure delivery location than the front porch but do not want delivery people inside their homes.

The company delivery service taps into the car’s built-in unlock feature without ever giving the delivery person a pass code or other permanent access to the car.

“Everything is securely encrypted between the two services,” said Rohit Shrivastava, Amazon Key’s general manager.

Shrivastava also said that company cannot see or track the customer’s car; instead, the customer gives company an address where the car will be parked and publicly accessible, along with the make, model, color and license plate number to help the delivery person find the right car. Customers also get several reminders on their phones before, during and after the packages are delivered.

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