
They would just stick their fingertips in and as many times as the CM's would say put them all the way in, they didn't listen. Really slows things up at the gates.... 
Acklander said:I've been using it for years with the annual pass so I'm used to it. I'm not concerned about it from a privacy angle though. It's quicker than checking everyone's ID to make sure that the right people are using the passes.
Same here. Been using it for years, no problems, and MUCH faster than checking ID's. I know for AP's if you lose your pass, you may go to Guest Services. Show them an ID and they can look up your pass, cancel the old one, and issue you a new one.mkrbdj said:Does Disney have any type of 'back up' for the tickets? Or do we just have to buy another pass to get in?
We always buy our tickets ahead of time and don't want to have to waste time AND spend more money on another pass.
Thanks
Kathy
Hardest part of that is standing in line....it's usually a slow one since everyone in that line has some sort of problem needing solving....but they usually have fantastic CM's in those windows!kadaten said:Same here. Been using it for years, no problems, and MUCH faster than checking ID's.
As for what it is, it is not really a scan, it's a measurement. The machine measures several distances between certain points on your fingers....the first time you use the ticket, those measurements are recorded. Every other time you use your ticket, those measurements are verified against the original measurements...if they match, it knows it's you and lets you in. If they don't, you have to re-do it or provide ID to prove that it is your ticket. Supposedly it takes enough measurements that no two people will have the same exact numbers.
If people are up in arms about this, I can't WAIT to see what they when they're asked for a real fingerprint. At some of our local grocery stores, if you want to write a check, you have to leave a fingerprint! Yes, a real fingerprint scan! I've also been asked for a fingerprint when I've gone to cash a check at a bank where I did not have an account (but was where the check writer had an account). I know it bothers a lot of people, but it doesn't bother me. (I've been known to subscribe to the "I have nothing to hide" reasoning, but that doesn't mean I always want to give up every piece of info somebody wants!) I actually *like* that once you're in the store systems, you don't have to provide ID every time you write a check...just the first time you give your print....and I LOVE that if things are verified by fingerprint, there will be no fraudulent use of my account possible, at least not at that store. BUT, I can see where some people are coming from.....
That is not true. The president of the ACLU has stated that if people don't like the system they can avoid Disney. Secondly there is nothing they could do, because as a private company Disney had the legal right to do what it wants on this matter. Also it is not a requirement for entry into the park as anyone can refuse to use the system and show a photo ID to get in.DebbieB said:I saw somewhere on the web yesterday that the ACLU is looking into the legality of the biometrics (privacy rights).