sell 10million packages each with missing 2% of contents.
sell those 200000 extra packages with the contens you “saved” (no, not 204000 with again missing 2%, see below why)
do not pay taxes on extra packages you sold as you can “proof” you sold all 10million paying those taxes.
receive 200000 * price of package as personal taxfree extra income.
write that one guy who complained about missing 8grams of pasta a sorry letter
complain about time loss and costs writing a single sorry letter and pay paper and stamp out of “marketing” campaigns budget
complain about the world not trusting companies
complain about people using badly adjusted scales
complain about someone selling none-genuine products on market with your logo faked.
assume that those packages with missing contents could be just those fake products.
done a full circle.
but… kitchen scales are really bad.
most other scales as well.
i tried to find (electronic) scales that are actually precise:
for low weights i ended up with a scale with 0.01 gram precison, but it could only measure a bit more than 100grams (and also included a 100gr calibration weight)
for higher weigths i only found a scale for post offices measuring packages. the only thing the vendor “really” promised was that multiple times measuring the same thing would be showing the same weight (nope the best “affordable” scale on the market here did not promise to measure correctly, just to measure over and over the same…)
i guess the options for accurate measuring are
old style mechanical scales daily adjusted
high priced industry/laboratory scales with warranties
fun fact:
after i bought that 0.01gr precicion scale, amazon showed me small plastic clip bags with green leaf signs on it as “recommended” products for month, while i used the scale to mix just small amounts of 2-component epoxy resin in projects.
see, capitalism works!
done a full circle.
but… kitchen scales are really bad. most other scales as well. i tried to find (electronic) scales that are actually precise:
for low weights i ended up with a scale with 0.01 gram precison, but it could only measure a bit more than 100grams (and also included a 100gr calibration weight)
for higher weigths i only found a scale for post offices measuring packages. the only thing the vendor “really” promised was that multiple times measuring the same thing would be showing the same weight (nope the best “affordable” scale on the market here did not promise to measure correctly, just to measure over and over the same…)
i guess the options for accurate measuring are
fun fact:
after i bought that 0.01gr precicion scale, amazon showed me small plastic clip bags with green leaf signs on it as “recommended” products for month, while i used the scale to mix just small amounts of 2-component epoxy resin in projects.