Ethics are subjective. Rules and laws are based on the ethics of the majority. And the majority changes over time. Remember when it was perfectly acceptable to spank your kids? Now it is "unethical".
I also think people are ready to jump on the "throwaway room" bandwagon as being their cause for not being able to book a room - when there is no real evidence that there is any great percentage of guests that are doing this anyways.
And digging this back up...
The idea that Disney is happy just to get the $75 for a room just isn't true.
For the campgrounds it's an even more ridiculous notion.
Perhaps if they're pulling in $500 a night for a deluxe, that might be true, but they built cheap resorts to get people to physically stay on site that couldn't otherwise afford it. If you are physically there, that's where you spend your money. They aren't making the big money on the room, they're making it on your food and entertainment and souvenir purchases.
And they are still getting that money. Maybe not at the resort itself, but the whole point is to go to the parks, where they are presumably spending money still.
If the argument is that they aren't spending any additional money at the resort, then we should probably ban all the people staying at value resorts as only a "place to sleep", since they are doing the same thing.
Also, it clogs their reservation system. A guest who wants to book a 10 night stay might not be able to get their length of stay because on at least 1 night, the rooms are all booked. That's all it takes to stop them from booking, so Disney just lost a ton of money in reservations, dining and purchasing power and got $75 in exchange.
No evidence that it does this any more than it did before. Disney has a lot of data has to how people typically book rooms. Plus, people book 1-night rooms all the time and USE them. See the above post where they bookended an off-site stay with one night each on-site. By that argument the same problem comes up.
The fact is that people book rooms of differing lengths all the time, and they all cause scheduling issues. No one does throwaway DVC reservations, yet I can have trouble getting a single room for every night of a stay sometimes.
In Computer Science, it's a form of what we call the "knapsack problem". You have so many things you want to put in it, but a limited size. You need to find an optimal fit. Disney's been working on that problem for a long time and are probably in fact the best at it.
That said, there have been reports that at certain times and resorts, they've started requiring a minimum two night stay.
It also takes away fp availability for those it was intended for- length of stay on site guests. This makes for ( and you only have to read these boards to see it) very unhappy on site guests.
FP+ is for all guests. Disney said that right up front, but people insisted that it would be for guests only. Yet that's not what happened.
The only difference is in the booking window. And KNOW ONE knows that the reason they couldn't get the A&E FP+ was because of all these evil, evil throwaway room people.
Lastly, when they do figure it out, they'll fix it and it's could well come in the form of requiring minimum stays. If you have to book 2 or 3 nights to get those perks, you're not near as likely to do it. That hurts those who have a legitimate reasons for booking a single night.
That is, again, if they consider it a problem. They don't seem to consider it a problem (CM's opinions aside) yet, since they've done near nothing about it. But if they do, I think you'll see that the 60-day perk will require a 2+ day reservation. Yes, those with "legit" 1-night stays will be affected, but there is no way to distinguish.
Either that, or the chronic "abusers" will be flagged and they will address them more directly.
IF we see Disney do something, then we'll know they consider it a problem.
What's funny is that this same exact concept was around LONG BEFORE FP+...throwaway rooms for a long time were booked for Extra Magic Hours, and that of course was why they were crowded. Longer throwaway reservations were booked (and then canceled) to get an advantage with dining reservations, and that of course was why you couldn't get CRT reservations... (he says facetiously...)