Spyke
kbin.social

If it’s abused it will be removed as a perk and military folks won’t be able to use it.

6

It’s not that hard to link to Id.me for verification. If a business doesn’t want to be smart about proper verification that’s on them.

1

If you look in the comments, some people think it's unethical but others don't. It's subjective, i guess.

5
lemmy.world

Also just Google " coupon code" and try random codes from there

2
kbin.social

Damn this makes me sad. If this catches on, I’m might to have to stop giving a military discount. I felt it was my duty. I have given military discounts for the last 12 years because the US military under pays those folks that volunteer to give their lives for my freedom to run my business. I run a micro business and that discount can really effect my bottom line. I’m really tired of getting screwed because I tried to do right by the people that protect me.

-7

If you are living in the US, i can assure you, military ain't protecting you from anyone. USA as a whole is not about protecting, but attacking and killing others.

7
lemmy.world

this is called stolen valor and is overwhelmingly seen as a jerk move

-34
lemmy.world

Hardly. Stolen valor is when you impersonate a vet for clout.

You're putting in a code in a checkout menu that you and you alone will see, to get a discount.

36
dystopreply
lemmy.world

Thought experiment: what if it's in-store and the cashier asks if you're in the military and you say yes?

8

I'd say dick move in that scenario. At that point you're no longer throwing strings of text at a website, you're lying to a person. What if the cashier's father died serving? That's an awkward situation you don't wanna be in.

8

You reached the end