A couple of thoughts and observations...
At first blush, I didn't think that there was a chance in H-E-Double Hockey Sticks that the site in question could have a material impact on the overall reservation system. And after reading the most recent posts about how many ADRs are actually for sale, that has been confirmed. The number of Disney restaurants that are popular enough to matter are very small in number.
I'm not at all convinced that Disney cares about this in the way you might think. They might be "looking into it", but they are likely doing so in order to protect copyrights, or for other IP issues, the way that they stop day care centers from painting Disney characters on the sides of buildings. I don't think that they are looking into this to prevent ADRs from being made. If all of this press results in people being even more vigilant in booking their ADRs, and ADRs are getting booked at an even higher rate than before, why would the money-making engine at Disney want to stop this? Do you think that Disney cares if you had to pay $15 extra for an ADR at BoG any more than the Dodgers care if you bought your game ticket on StubHub? All the Dodgers care about is that the ticket got sold at its asking price to begin with, so they made their money. And there will be a fanny in the seats to buy beer and Dodger Dogs. Disney is no different. The only question the restaurant manager has to answer is: "Is her restaurant full?"
Disney already has a system in place for stopping the process if it chooses to do so. It simply has to utilize it. ADRs require a CC for booking. That very same card has to be shown at check-in, and a photo ID has to be presented that matches the name on the CC. No CC switches allowed after the ADR is made. I have purchased lots of "will call" tickets to events where this has been done. If you can't present the CC at the time of the ADR, sorry, but you lose.
When we were at AKL in July a lady next to me at the concierge desk was going through and canceling reservations for the week. She had multiple ADRs for multiple meals for each day of her stay. What a horrible person.
I cannot agree with this. Right now, planning a trip to WDW requires making decisions way in advance. You plan to dine at The Crystal Palace and book 189 in advance. You don't know what the weather will be like. Who might be ill. Or what event might come up and change your plans. If it rains, maybe you would prefer to spend your day at EPCOT inside the large pavilions. So you double book at Via Napoli. And once you get to Florida, your plans coalesce and you make a final decision and cancel your unwanted ADR. She is not a horrible person for the following reasons. Disney allows you to double book. Disney allows you to cancel a day in advance. Disney will charge you if you do not cancel a day in advance. Disney is very crowded and popular places always have people trying to get in by walking up. So the woman wasn't doing anything that she wasn't allowed to do. All she had done was make a contingency plan to account for the fact that a trip to WDW involves a lot of guessing about what the future will hold and a lot of advanced planning way beyond any time period that sane people would call reasonable. Indeed, she was actually courteous enough to cancel her unwanted ADRs which no doubt got scarfed up within 10 minutes, or perhaps her space was taken by a walk-up. The table didn't sit empty. I have absolutely no problem with people who double book, as long as they release their unwanted reservations back into the pool.
We were able to get most of the ADRs we wanted...
And in the end, this is all that matters. This is truly a mountain made from a molehill. BoG has been hard to get since day one. The creation of an ADR booking site has not changed this one bit.
Finally, I agree with the folks who have commented that the angst over some very mediocre restaurants is mostly "on us" as guests and not on Disney and not on some third party site. We create the panic. When Le Cellier first opened, it was pretty popular, but not crazy. The first 3 times I ate there, I walked up and got a table. Then, something happened and it became the "it" place. All of a sudden, it was one of the places that you had to book 180 days out. Same thing happened to Ohana. It was popular, but not crazy. Then some internet wildfire struck and all of a sudden it was the hardest ADR to get. Neither of these restaurants changed in any way to make them more desirable. But internet chatter seems to have made them soar in popularity. That is the fault of the lemmings, not of Disney. And all the while, the very best restaurants at WDW have been and continue to be virtual walk-ups. I have never called bluezoo and been turned away. Even the morning of. I am sure that they must book full every now and again if a big conference is in town. But in the 25 or so times that I have dined there, I have never had a problem getting in, and at least half of those times, I called the day of, the day before, or up to a week in advance.