I found this info on:
http://www.mouseplanet.com/11179/Disneyland_Park_Update_for_October_511_2015
There are three steps to accessing this benefit.
- Create your Disneyland.com account online at Disneyland.com/AP , or via the Disneyland mobile App. If using the mobile App., make sure you have the newest version - (v1.1).
- Take photos. There are now four ways to link the photos:
- Have the PhotoPass photographer scan your physical annual pass
- Have the PhotoPass photographer scan a new or existing PhotoPass card
- If you use the Disneyland mobile App., you can have the PhotoPass photographer scan the barcode that displays in the App.
- If you took a ride photo, write down the 8-digit photo ID that is shown on the photo preview
- View and download photos online. Once you get home, log in to your Disneyland.com account. Photos scanned to your annual pass or to the Disneyland mobile application should already be in your gallery. You can link any new PhotoPass cards or ride photo numbers. Then you can select the photos you like, and download them to your computer. Photos are archived for 365 days from the date taken, another major change to the offering.
As Disneyland extends this benefit to passholders, they have also increased the number of PhotoPass photographers in the parks, and added "roving" photographers who aren't necessarily tethered to a tripod. Roving photographers are in these locations:
Disneyland Park:
- New Orleans Square
- Frontierland
- Fantasyland
- Mickey's Towntown
- Matterhorn Bobsleds
- Splash Mountain
Disney California Adventure Park:
- Buena Vista Street
- Hollywood Land
- Cars Land
- Radiator Springs Racers
- Grizzly River Run
- Redwood Creek Challenge Trail
With Disney charging $14.95 per photo for digital downloads, this new benefit offers big savings to passholders who regularly purchased the photos. If you never used PhotoPass before, there's no reason not to try it now if it's included with the pass. However, the new benefit is so rife for abuse and fraud that we expect it to be modified in the near future.
Consider this: there appear to be no restrictions to how many PhotoPass cards a Premier or Signature passholder can link to their account, nor any rules about whose photos you can link to your card. So long as the photos are tied to a PhotoPass card, and not another annual pass, there's nothing to prevent a Premier or Signature passholder from linking the photos to their account. Say you are a Signature passholder and your relatives are in town - there's nothing to prevent you from linking their PhotoPass cards to your account and then downloading all of their vacations photos for them for free.
That's the abuse part - passholders using their benefit for friends and family without financial consideration. The fraud comes in when someone decides to monetize the new benefit. There are companies—plural—who make a business of reselling dining reservations at Walt Disney World. Is it any stretch to imagine someone will set up shop offering PhotoPass downloads to non-passholders at a discount?
Disney probably has some computerized triggers in place to catch rampant fraud, but it's going to happen on a smaller scale now that some people have a way to get for free what others must pay $15 bucks a pop for. For now, enjoy your new benefit.