The Wall Street Journal - 22.02.2020 - 23.02.2020

(Axel Boer) #1

A10| Saturday/Sunday, February 22 - 23, 2020 **** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


FROM PAGE ONE


Nick Hanna, U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, said Wells Fargo
‘traded its hard-earned reputation for short-term profits.’

STEFANIE DAZIO/ASSOCIATED PRESS

tomer to their winter formal,”
says Giant’s Ms. Flower. “Marty
was working that night so he
couldn’t make the event, but
sent his regards.”
Kristen Flanagan, a deli
manager and union steward at
a Stop & Shop in Somerset,
Mass., says Marty could cost
human jobs, adding: “Super-
markets were meant for people
to interact with people and
serve people.”

Stop & Shop spokeswoman
Jennifer Brogan says Marty
isn’t taking away jobs from
workers and is designed to help
them spend more time aiding
customers.
Guy Hoffman, an assistant
professor at Cornell Univer-
sity’s Sibley School of Mechani-
cal and Aerospace Engineering,
has studied human-robot inter-
action for 16 years and says
technology isn’t close to replac-

Marty the robot looks for spills at a grocery store. Many kids love
it, but one shopper calls it a ‘weird gray cylinder roaming around.’

MATT ROURKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS

leave their money there. It
also has unsettled customers
who have long thought of re-
tail banking as a service that
takes deposits and makes
loans, not a sales-driven in-
dustry hawking as many prod-
ucts as possible.
Regulators first fined Wells
Fargo over the sales practices
in 2016, alleging that execu-
tives created a pressure-
cooker environment in
branches where low-level em-

ployees were so beset by high
sales goals that they opened
up fake and unauthorized bank
accounts.
Afterward, regulators and
lawmakers were outraged not
just by the allegations but by
what they perceived as the
bank’s slow response to them.
What’s more, with the bank
under increasing scrutiny, ad-
ditional legal and regulatory
problems sprang up across
other business units, including

founder Martin Hitch. “We’ve
watched a person swing a full
bag of groceries and hit it,” he
says, but most ignore it.
Marty’s eyes and name help
customers feel more comfort-
able around the 140-pound ro-
bot as it circles stores report-
ing spills and other potential
hazards for cleanup, says Bad-
ger Technologies Chief Execu-
tive Tim Rowland.
Still, some shoppers have
complained Marty was follow-
ing them. Badger engineers had
designed the robot to halt
when a shopper got too close
and start again when the per-
son moved away. That made
sense in the lab; in the store, a
slowly browsing customer
might feel tailed by the stop-
ping-and-starting robot.
The company developed
“anti-creep” software that lets
Marty pass people who are
stopped or moving short dis-
tances, thereby respecting per-
sonal space.
Engineers changed the ro-
bot’s voice—“Caution! Hazard
detected!” it says—to female
from male, which was deemed
too harsh. The robot’s soft whir
was hard to hear over the gro-
cery-store din, so they added a
“boop, boop” sound similar to a
checkout-line scanner’s.
“The last thing you want,”
says Mr. Rowland, “is this 6-foot
mechanical thing sneaking up
on someone buying cat food.”
Marty developed a following,
with people posting videos and
children dragging parents over
to look. “We recently had a re-
quest for Marty to escort a cus-

ing human contact. Understand-
ing how a person is feeling in-
volves social context and body
language, he says, and artificial
intelligence isn’t there yet.
One person browsing a su-
permarket aisle might feel hur-
ried by a slow-moving robot, he
says, while a hurried shopper
might deem the robot to be in
the way.
Simbe Robotics engineers
built Tally to be as unobtrusive
as possible, says CEO Brad Bo-
golea. Tally’s spinning base lets
it take up little space in
crowded stores, he says, and its
digital panels with eyes look in
its direction of travel.
Most shoppers aren’t ex-
pecting to see robots, and engi-
neers wanted to make the in-
teraction easy, Mr. Bogolea
says: “Tally is really designed
as this sort of shy robot.”
Then there is the problem of
“uncanny valley,” the observa-
tion in robotics that humans
find robots more appealing as
they get more humanlike—up
to a point, after which they
seem creepy.
“For the retail robots, we
were more concerned about
them not looking smarter than
reality,” says Sarjoun Skaff,
chief technology officer at
Bossa Nova. “Anthropomorphic
features such as eyes may proj-
ect a higher level of intelligence
and draw attention.”
The goal is for retail robots
to be accepted and eventually
overlooked, he says: “The ro-
bot’s job is to take pictures of
products on shelves, and it’s
not to sit around and chit-chat.”

Marty a personality and en-
dear him to shoppers’ chil-
dren, says Ashley Flower, a
spokeswoman for Giant Food
Stores LLC, part of Ahold Del-
haize USA. Badger Technolo-
gies sells the robot to other
retailers, too, with each free to
pick its own robot name.
Warehouse and factory em-
ployees have worked alongside
robots for decades. Home-
owners unleash Roomba auto-
mated vacuums on dust bun-
nies. Robots and drones have
started rolling down sidewalks
and buzzing backyards as tech
companies experiment with us-
ing them for delivery.
Robots are also starting to
cruise retail-store aisles, and
they’ve had to learn to make
way for humans.
Badger Technologies says it
has deployed 506 robots to gro-
cers in nine states over the last
year, including at Giant and
Stop & Shop Supermarket Co.
stores. “Overall people really
like Marty and understand it,”
says President Gordon Reid of
Stop & Shop, another Ahold
chain that uses the Marty name.
Bossa Nova Robotics Inc. of
San Francisco has a similar ro-
bot in 350 Walmart Inc. stores


ContinuedfromPageOne


Robots Hit


Grocery


Aisles


and plans to roll out 650 more
by summer. Its robot scans
shelves to see which products
are missing but doesn’t have
arms, so humans do restocking.
Simbe Robotics Inc. in San
Francisco says its robot named
Tally—it looks like a white
Roomba topped with a tall,
slender rectangular platform—
is in more than 100 retail stores
world-wide, including Midwest-
ern grocer Schnuck Markets
Inc. and the global sporting-
goods brand Decathlon.
A Walmart spokesman de-
clined to comment. Schnuck
and Decathlon representatives
say Tally takes over the task of

inventorying store shelves so
employees can spend more
time helping customers.
Maya Kaczor, 23, says she
was taken aback when she first
encountered Marty in a pro-
duce section last summer. “I al-
most walked right into it, and
it’s a 6-foot-tall thing with goo-
gly eyes,” says Ms. Kaczor, who
lives in Woodland Park, N.J.,
and works in publishing. “I was
initially terrified it would run
over my foot or something.”
She avoids Marty, which she
calls a “weird gray cylinder
roaming around.”
Robots can face a bit of bul-
lying, says Bossa Nova co-

Me, creepy?

tions. Ms. Caffarra declined to
comment. A settlement of the
suit was reached Thursday, ac-
cording to the person familiar
with the matter.
News Corp has complained
that Google and other digital
companies siphon ad revenue
from content creators. Micro-
soft competes with Google in
areas including cloud services
and office-productivity tools.
Google fought a broad sub-
poena issued by then-Missis-
sippi Attorney General Jim
Hood in 2014. That subpoena
sought information on
Google’s platforms, ad prac-
tices and efforts to police
“dangerous” or “illegal” con-
tent related to illicit drug
sales, consumer credit-card in-
formation, human trafficking
and copyright infringement.
In response, Google filed a
suit against Mr. Hood that re-
sulted in a federal judge en-
joining the Mississippi probe
for a time. The judge said
Google had presented “signifi-
cant evidence of bad faith,”
suggesting that the attorney
general’s investigation repre-
sented an effort to coerce
Google to comply with Mr.
Hood’s requests regarding
content removal.
Google’s complaint came as
emails surfaced from a hack of
Sony Pictures, suggesting
movie studios were working
behind the scenes with Mr.
Hood’s office to discredit
Google. The motion-picture in-
dustry has long complained
about copyright abuses on the
internet. The injunction
against Mr. Hood was eventu-
ally overturned on appeal.
State attorneys general in-
vestigating Google have been
in discussions with Mr. Hood—
who left office in January—
about joining their effort,
likely as an expert.

chats and text messages from
Google employees. Google law-
yers asked for “a reasonable
approach and timeframe for
responding” to the demands.
In a Jan. 6 reply, the chief
of the Texas Office of the At-
torney General’s antitrust divi-
sion responded, “This is not
true: the instructions accom-
panying our [civil subpoena]
clearly indicate that these
types of electronic materials
are both covered and re-
quested, and we have not
agreed or implied that mere

email searches could suffice to
satisfy Google’s [subpoena]
obligations.”
The two sides have also
clashed over how many Google
employees must be included in
the search for responsive in-
formation. During the first
five months of the probe,
Texas proposed 96 while
Google said 11, according to a
Feb. 4 letter from Google law-
yers. Google has since raised
the number of employees it
was willing to include in the
search, according to the letter.

Google says that the com-
pany has moved quickly to
produce relevant documents
to the attorneys general, even
as it battles the Texas state at-
torney general over other as-
pects of the probe.
In a suit filed in Texas on
Oct. 31, Google sought protec-
tions to prevent consultants
hired for the Texas-led investi-
gation from improperly using
information obtained during
the probe.
The Google suit said that
one of the consultants, Cris-

tina Caffarra of Charles River
Associates, “has worked di-
rectly for numerous Google
adversaries on antitrust and
competition matters,” includ-
ing Microsoft Corp. and News
Corp, owner of The Wall
Street Journal.
Texas filed a response op-
posing Google’s suit. Texas of-
ficials believe Google’s con-
cerns about potentially
improper disclosure of sensi-
tive information are ade-
quately addressed by existing
state confidentiality protec-

A Google spokeswoman said discussions over access to information are common during investigations.

AMY OSBORNE/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

tants who could share confi-
dential information from
Google with rival companies.
“To date, Texas has re-
quested, and we have pro-
vided, over 100,000 pages of
information,” the spokes-
woman said. “But we’re also
concerned with the irregular
way this investigation is pro-
ceeding, including unusual ar-
rangements with advisers who
work with our competitors
and vocal complainants."
The investigation by state
attorneys general seeks to de-
termine whether Google en-
gaged in anticompetitive be-
havior in building up its ad
business, among other issues.
As part of their probe, state
investigators have sought
emails and other documents
from high-level executives and
directors at the company, as
well as texts and instant mes-
sages from Google employees
who might have information
on suspect practices, accord-
ing to letters reviewed by The
Wall Street Journal under a
public-records-act request.
Google attorneys have
raised concerns to Texas in-
vestigators about the scope of
their requests.
In a letter dated Dec. 26,
for example, lawyers for
Google in Texas said that in a
recent phone call, Texas inves-
tigators had made “significant
and new requests” beyond
their September civil sub-
poena, including demands for


ContinuedfromPageOne


Google Is


Resisting


Demands


wealth management and for-
eign-exchange trading. What
was once a fast-growing
lender whose profits towered
above those of rivals became a
firm with declining revenue
that is leaning heavily on cost
cuts.
The SEC portion of the set-
tlement accused the bank of
misleading shareholders. Ac-
cording to the charges, Wells
Fargo touted to investors its
ability to sell additional prod-
ucts to current customers, a
practice known as cross-sell-
ing, even though numbers
were inflated because of the
fake accounts.
Aside from Friday’s settle-
ment, regulators and prosecu-
tors could still take action
against former executives, ac-
cording to people familiar
with the situation. Last
month, the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency
charged eight former execu-
tives over the fake-account
scandal.
Wells Fargo for years en-
joyed a reputation as a folksy
industry darling that catered
to Main Street customers. But
that reputation was left in tat-
ters after the sales scandal be-
came public.
“Wells Fargo traded its
hard-earned reputation for

short-term profits, and
harmed untold numbers of
customers along the way,”
Nick Hanna, U.S. Attorney in
Los Angeles, said Friday.
Prosecutors said the prac-
tices date to 1998, when Wells
Fargo began to rely more
heavily on sales growth. It
pressured employees to cross
sell additional products to cur-
rent customers.
The heightened pressure
pushed many employees to
open checking and savings ac-
counts without customer
knowledge and make up iden-
tification numbers to activate
unauthorized debit cards.
Employees, afraid they
would be fired otherwise,
sometimes forged customer
signatures to open accounts or
altered customers’ contact in-
formation to prevent them
from learning about unauthor-
ized accounts, the government
said.
Regulators and prosecutors
said top managers knew of
these issues years ago. In
2004, an internal investigator
called it a “growing plague.”
In 2005, a corporate investiga-
tions manager described the
problem as “spiraling out of
control.” Employees continued
to raise concerns internally,
the government said. It also

said certain executives “im-
peded” the OCC from scruti-
nizing the sales practices.
After the scandal erupted in
2016, top executives faced
heavy criticism for holding
lower-level employees respon-
sible. Wells Fargo fired thou-
sands of branch employees,
but regulators, lawmakers and
even the bank’s own board
questioned whether junior
staffers were to blame.
A board investigation found
that the bank’s decentralized
structure allowed top execu-
tives to avoid addressing these
issues as they got bigger.
Without referring to her by
name, the Justice Department
heavily criticized Carrie Tolst-
edt, the former head of the
consumer bank. By 2012, re-
gional executives “were regu-
larly raising objections” to Ms.
Tolstedt about “unlawful and
unethical sales practices.”
Ms. Tolstedt is one of the
former executives the OCC
charged last month. Her law-
yer said Friday she “acted ap-
propriately and in good faith
at all times, and the effort to
scapegoat her is both unfair
and unfounded.”
—Rachel Louise Ensign,
Aruna Viswanatha and Dave
Michaels contributed to this
article.

happens again, while also
driving Wells Fargo forward.”
The bank, though, still faces
major regulatory problems. It
is under sanction by the Fed-
eral Reserve, which has taken
the unusual step of capping
the bank’s growth. Settling
with the Justice Department
and SEC could allow the bank
to focus on persuading the Fed
to lift the cap.
As part of the settlement,
Wells Fargo admitted that it
“unlawfully misused custom-
ers’ sensitive personal infor-
mation” and harmed some
customers’ credit ratings, col-
lecting millions of dollars in
fees and interest in the pro-
cess.
The scandal severely dam-
aged the bank’s reputation
with customers and regulators
alike, providing a case study
of sorts on how success in
banking depends on customers
trusting a firm enough to


ContinuedfromPageOne


Wells


Fa rg o D ea l


Ends Probe

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