This is a tough question. I am basically in agreement with Dean. I feel that we do live in a free country and you are free to do with your property as you wish.
I also fell strongly about living up to agreements and contracts. While renting is explicitly allowed, renting out as a business is implicitly prohibited with the "commersial" reference.
I like to enforce the spirit of the contract. I think that the spirit of the contract allows renting and forbids buying for the purpose of renting.
I do feel Disney owes us a fudiciary responsibility of looking into and sanctioning those that are in conflict with the spirit of the contract. I think that renters that rent a significant portion of their points each year should be at a small disadvantage in acquiring reservations. I think that people that rent as a commercial venture should be forced to forfeit their points. I think that if a renter does not declare the rentee as a "renter" they should be sanctioned, forfeiting those points sounds reasonable.
How do we determine a "commercial" venture. I threw out a possible rule of thumb of 1/2 the points whould be used by family or friends. Is that fair? I am not sure, the previous poster seems to fall into, what I would consider, a non-commercial venture. Yet he fails my 1/2 test.
I don't know, in a perfect world, I would say that for reservations made for the purpose of the owner staying and as a matter of circomstance, he can't go, even Christmas day is fair to rent out. This type of thing shouldn't happen more then once in ten years. All other reservations made for the purpose of renting should be made at ten months....I think that the home resort advantage is fine to use to rent....lets lock out those VBers....only kidding, but I do think that 10 months would be fine. Never SSPL, but ten months is fine.
How many points? A pattern of rservations and usage that is obviously commercial?? I think these things should be looked into by
DVC, I believe they have a duty to do that.
"From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs", Karl Marx, pretty sick, huh?