Posted
Five workers face charges of illegally selling multi-day passes to Walt Disney World, Universal Orlando and SeaWorld Orlando, according to the Osceola County Sheriff's Office. Detectives recovered 860 tickets worth more than $111,000.
Read more from The Orlando Sentinel.
Wouldn't matter, because the ticket is still non-transferable by the parks' rules, and it's enforced with the biometrics at the gate.
Jeff - Editor - CoasterBuzz.com - My Blog
I guess what I was getting at is that you're still selling merchandise with no value. When you show up with this used ticket, it's not going to work. The law you're breaking isn't reselling tickets, it's selling something that has no value.
Jeff - Editor - CoasterBuzz.com - My Blog
They weren't using biometrics or even signatures in California. That made it very easy for me to give a friend my a ticket that I didn't plan on finishing using.
884 Coasters, 34 States, 7 Countries
http://www.rollercoasterfreak.com My YouTube
I didn't say it was. I was just real suprised that they don't use the same technology at all their parks.
884 Coasters, 34 States, 7 Countries
http://www.rollercoasterfreak.com My YouTube
Given the Orlando parks pricing structure (the more you play the less you pay per day), a resale market doesn't work. I understand why they price that way, even though I don't like it as a consumer, and I respect their right to enforce their admissions policies. I guess the point of my first post is I think it's crappy that it's illegal to try to sell your unused days even if only a stupid or ignorant person would buy them.
^Why should they be transferable? Disney knows that the law of diminishing returns means that your first day at Disney is worth a whole lot more to you than your seventh day and just about any rational consumer will pay for it that way. Supply and demand.
^^ Except that Disney leaves a ton of money on the table that the second person would have paid to get in. If it's one or two days, were talking a difference of hundreds of dollars per person. (Especially at Disney where your first day costs, $90 and your 5th day costs something like $5).
Or more to the point, if Disney wanted people to get into the park for cheap or free, they'd do it themselves, not rely on a secondary market.
Hobbes: "What's the point of attaching a number to everything you do?"
Calvin: "If your numbers go up, it means you're having more fun."
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