
Recently, a mother in the United States taught her "bear child" in a special way. Recently, Caterlyn Rent, a 6-year-old first-grade girl in Utah, took advantage of her mother's inattention and ordered $350 (about 2,400 yuan) of various Barbie dolls and toy ponies on her amazon account.
Back home, a large pile of doll boxes startled her mother. "Our family came home and the truck stopped and all these boxes were pulled out of the truck."
The mother quickly went to the computer to check the order, and found that there were two full pages of orders that had all been shipped, and a small number of unseasoned orders could be canceled.
The mother did not get angry about her daughter's "profligacy" behavior, but decided to turn it into an "education lesson". She told her daughter that if she did extra housework, she would get one of the Barbie toys. For the rest, the mother donated all of the toys to the children at the local children's hospital.
Children's unauthorized use of their parents' accounts to splurge online is increasing. Last year, a 6-year-old girl in Dallas, Texas, bought a $160 dollhouse on her parents' account. Brooke's parents donated the dollhouse to a local children's hospital, and ABC News reported that the mom wanted the child's mistake to turn into a learning experience.
To avoid such a thing, Amazon responded to ABC last year that it would set up voice recognition when paying for online purchases, and that it would have to obtain an adult permission to make a voice (say "yes") to buy, but the company was not taking measures.