Bot orders $18,752 of McSundaes every 30 min. to find if machines are working

Authored by arstechnica.com and submitted by SligPants
image for Bot orders $18,752 of McSundaes every 30 min. to find if machines are working

The Verge interviewed Zahid about his project once his tweet announcing it took off.

He started the project examining McDonald's locations in Germany, where he lives. He biked around Berlin, physically visiting McDonald's locations to see if McBroken's data was correct. After it passed that test, he expanded to the US. He also found out shortly after launch that the one-minute time frame was too quick—the app pretty quickly pegged him as a bot and cut off access. Trying to add a McSundae to the cart every 30 minutes, however, keeps McBroken up to date and appears to meet the McDonald's app's human-seeking standards.

This is not the first time a customer has tried to develop a technological workaround to McDonald's corporate problems. In 2017, a woman named Raina McLeod created an app to track if McDonald's ice cream machines were working. As McLeod explained to BuzzFeed at the time, she created the app "after a late night Oreo McFlurry craving went unfulfilled due to the ice cream machine being down."

McLeod's app, however, relied on crowdsourced data and therefore only worked as well as the would-be ice-cream buyers using it. By going directly to the source, McBroken can keep its data both more accurate and more up to date.

For its part, McDonald's does not seem particularly upset about Zahid's project. The company has long acknowledged that its ice cream machines are a weak spot in its lineup. On Twitter, company communications and government relations executive David Tovar applauded the effort. "Only a true McDonald's fan would go to these lengths to help customers get our delicious ice cream!" Tovar said. "So thanks! We know we have some opportunities to consistently satisfy even more customers with sweet treats and we will."

In the meantime, according to a Business Insider report from last week, franchisees are taking the matter into their own hands and seeking their own solutions to make sure ice cream machines are working more often.

Are McDonald's broken ice cream machines the most urgent problem facing humanity? No, of course not, not by a long mile. But in a year like 2020, we have to take the little joys where we can, and a tool that can save you from disappointment before you're in the drive-through line can make life better in a small, measurable way.

tigger0jk on October 25th, 2020 at 03:57 UTC »

Note that the bot doesn't actually ORDER anything - it just sees what's available where.

Original author here: the phrasing placing an order was probably wrong - mcdonald's lists the products they're currently out in their api. I'm just querying for those.

No ice cream was harmed in doing this.

Quote is from this thread on hacker news

Also here's the website, http://mcbroken.com

nobletilapia on October 25th, 2020 at 01:33 UTC »

He started the project examining McDonald's locations in Germany, where he lives. He biked around Berlin, physically visiting McDonald's locations to see if McBroken's data was correct. After it passed that test, he expanded to the US. He also found out shortly after launch that the one-minute time frame was too quick—the app pretty quickly pegged him as a bot and cut off access. Trying to add a McSundae to the cart every 30 minutes, however, keeps McBroken up to date and appears to meet the McDonald's app's human-seeking standards.

From the article, I find this fascinating!

saltesc on October 25th, 2020 at 01:10 UTC »

Wow. The US has a lot of McDonalds. New York and Chicago are crazy.