Key Points
Walmart is rolling out digital shelf labels and expects the technology to be in all U.S. stores by year’s end. Kroger also has begun experimenting with the technology.
The nation’s largest retailer says the digital price tags help associates do their jobs better and stresses that prices on items will be exactly the same for every consumer in every store.
Some legislators are wary of the technology’s potential to be used in dynamic pricing models that disadvantage consumers, with Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) introducing a bill to ban it.


Dynamic pricing is not legal in Canada, but what our Real Canadian Super Store does on some items is set the price super high, then every day you go in it is a different “sale” price. On a specific soymilk the price ranges from 3.50 to 9.00.
sounds like the same thing, but with extra steps.
A workaround the law
Invidious. Damn.
Invidious like the open source youtube frontend ? /joking
https://invidious.io/
No, it’s a real word.
Insidious?
No, it’s a real word.
TIL