Oh OK. So your assertion is that therefore there must be widespread use of LR sensors in the parks? And based on the above, LR sensors must exist beyond the current known use of MM ride photos?
Not sure at this point what you're actually asserting, so I'm trying to clarify.
I didn't say the
must be, and I didn't say "widespread."
I said that logic dictates that they are using the long range readers to capture (I think I've lazily used "collect" in the past) and transmit data for gauging the condition of the park and for building behavioral models.
They designed them, they developed them, they built them, they patented them along with a system to collect and process all of the captured data, they registered them with the FCC, and they've spent $1.8 billion on the project that includes them.
But most importantly, you've acknowledged they're (did I get that right?) in the parks. You just think they're only using the captured data to send you pictures of yourself.
A long-range reader is a long range reader. Period. It doesn't process data. It captures it only as a means to transmit it to where it will be processed. It doesn't "care" if the data is used to populate a PhotoPass account or crowd level prediction account. Disney doesn't need a reader to capture "presence within the zone" data for PhotoPass and a separate reader to capture mere "presence within the zone" for behavior modelling.
The data is captured once, then analyzed many different ways with many different goals. Only one analysis is to used get you to buy pictures.
We're in agreement that they're present.
You've seen no evidence that Disney is using the data for other purposes. My answer is, "You won't." It's not your data, it's not for your use.
You also
seem to think that long-range readers need to be more prevalent than I do. Disney gets a ton of information from you actively interacting with them - from voluntary touch point activity, internet activity (scheduling FPs and ADRs).
It needs very little passive interaction from each guest. Where aggregation is needed, it aggregates. Where individualization is needed, it segregation takes place.
In short (after many words), the hardware you acknowledge is present in the parks is probably sufficient to capture what is needed.