
Intro: This delivery record focuses on a "privacy packaging" scenario: the sender de-emphasises brand cues and compresses identifiable info, so the recipient's attention is on whether the outer box has been re-opened, whether the seal is intact, and whether the parcel was crushed or got damp. We summarise checkpoints and risk reminders based on real observation.
Delivery scene

Logistics used a generic e-commerce carton rather than a branded box. The shipping label carried only a generic product name and a customer service number; no brand marks on the outside.
Key observations
The seal tape was a single continuous run; corners undamaged; internal bubble wrap full; product-box shrink wrap unbroken.
Principle-level suggestions
1) Seal check: tape should be a single run, no re-application or adhesive residue. 2) Accessory count: lay out against the checklist and photograph in one shot. 3) Evidence first: photograph wide + detail shots before any further handling. 4) Escalation order: report to the courier channel first, then sync with the ordering channel.
Risk reminder
If the seal has been re-applied, an accessory bag is torn, or the serial number doesn't match — stop powering on, preserve evidence, and contact the channel. Be wary of "destroy the packaging first" calls.
Open question
What do you check first when a parcel arrives? Share your habit so we can refine the reference checklist.
Safety reminder: Never share your recovery phrase, PIN, or verification codes with anyone. Take the device screen as the source of truth for key confirmations. If anything about the delivery or unboxing looks off — stop first, keep evidence, and contact the channel you ordered through.