@Arapalla @davidgerard yes and if it used your Discover card you won’t be allowed to dispute the charge.
I’m an old lady, most of my career was in lending, I haven’t worked in a while so my knowledge is old. But I know how these things used to work.
This year (or maybe late last) year #discover changed with they allow for disputes. Now if you authorize someone to charge anything to your card it’s an authorized charge. If you buy a product and you don’t receive it they’ll still allow you to dispute it, but if you hand your card to a server and they charge all the tables in the restaurant to it, or if they alter the tip amount you write, even if you can prove to discover that this was wrong they won’t help you.
You will have to seek reimbursement from the restaurant and if they refuse you have to sue them.
This is not how it’s supposed to work, and I don’t think any of my other credit cards do this. But it’s probably coming soon.
It looks like this shopping feature is exactly why they did that. If I allowed my toothbrush access to my Amazon account so it could order new brush heads when the current brush head is getting old, if it decides to order 300 toothbrush heads and Amazon likes that it made that sale and refuses to let me return them, no dispute for me. Yay.