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Starbucks scraps AI inventory tool; Pizza Hut franchisee sues over delivery AI

Published
Score
11

Why it matters

Starbucks has discontinued Automated Counting, an AI system designed to track inventory across its stores, after employees reported persistent counting errors and misidentified products. The company is reverting to manual inventory processes for affected categories while maintaining investment in other AI tools, including Green Dot Assist for barista operations, Smart Queue for order management, and a ChatGPT integration within its mobile app.

Meanwhile, Pizza Hut faces litigation from Chaac Pizza Northeast, a franchisee operating more than 100 locations, over Dragontail, an AI-powered delivery platform. The franchisee claims it was required to adopt the system, which allegedly lengthened average wait times and created operational friction by providing DoorDash drivers real-time order status—prompting drivers to remain in restaurants waiting for multiple orders to consolidate. Chaac Pizza Northeast alleges the tool caused significant sales declines and approximately $100 million in lost business value and enterprise value.

For attorneys advising restaurant operators and food-service companies, these cases underscore emerging liability risks in AI implementation. The Starbucks rollback suggests internal performance failures may trigger operational corrections without legal exposure, but the Pizza Hut dispute demonstrates that mandatory adoption of underperforming AI systems can expose franchisors to breach-of-contract and damages claims. Franchisees and operators should scrutinize AI implementation mandates, document performance impacts, and consider whether contractual language permits pushback or termination rights when systems fail to meet operational standards.

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