There are not really as much restrictions about ammo storage and less so with a vending machine. But what do you mean by bypass? What does it not being a person matter (any storage is not a person unless they are hooping rounds and yet people are still responsible for storage)?
I mean in terms of buying it. A vending machine has zero critical thinking skills and can potentially recognize someone behaving oddly, or blatantly using someone else’s ID or other similar funny business.
I’m not talking about storage, the ubiquitous comment was about that. Like you said its almost always stored poorly, a vending machine doesnt change that.
What? I did not say that. I was talking about storing explosives in a closed metal box (vending machine) is basically a bomb and the company was incorrectly thinking security of live ammo only had to do with theft and access. Did you just do the same exact thing as the people who make this vending machine?
Also to note, at least outside of america ammo is mostly stored securely (as in not a bomb and not trivially accessible out side of a store). You could argue that it could be better, but honestly the theft part is not the big issue in most places outside of america due to needing a firearm (or rough equivalent) to use the ammo.
No, I agree that its weird, I’m just saying its weirdly common to the way many locations store ammo. As you mentioned, piling it up under a thin piece of glass or inside a cabinet isn’t really better. Its all pretty weird.
I also think the vending machine aspect is weird because it introduces other problems.
No piling it up under a thin piece of glass or in a cage is better, like by a explosive amount. I was literally arguing the very opposite of what you have taken from my text, I really must do better it seems.
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There are not really as much restrictions about ammo storage and less so with a vending machine. But what do you mean by bypass? What does it not being a person matter (any storage is not a person unless they are hooping rounds and yet people are still responsible for storage)?
I mean in terms of buying it. A vending machine has zero critical thinking skills and can potentially recognize someone behaving oddly, or blatantly using someone else’s ID or other similar funny business.
I’m not talking about storage, the ubiquitous comment was about that. Like you said its almost always stored poorly, a vending machine doesnt change that.
Sorry I said it poorly and made that unclear
What? I did not say that. I was talking about storing explosives in a closed metal box (vending machine) is basically a bomb and the company was incorrectly thinking security of live ammo only had to do with theft and access. Did you just do the same exact thing as the people who make this vending machine?
Also to note, at least outside of america ammo is mostly stored securely (as in not a bomb and not trivially accessible out side of a store). You could argue that it could be better, but honestly the theft part is not the big issue in most places outside of america due to needing a firearm (or rough equivalent) to use the ammo.
No, I agree that its weird, I’m just saying its weirdly common to the way many locations store ammo. As you mentioned, piling it up under a thin piece of glass or inside a cabinet isn’t really better. Its all pretty weird.
I also think the vending machine aspect is weird because it introduces other problems.
Many things can be weird about this.
No piling it up under a thin piece of glass or in a cage is better, like by a explosive amount. I was literally arguing the very opposite of what you have taken from my text, I really must do better it seems.