Disney readies it's Mark of the Beast for it's Parks..

Soymuscle Mike

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I actually worked the Epcot turnstyles, as part of an international internship in which I was also working for the marketing team for exits/entrances Epcot, and this is not MUCH different from some of the shyt that's going down now.

Now they're already scanning the biometrics of your fingerprints and imprinting it on the cards/tickets - this will just be a bracelet.
 
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I actually worked the Epcot turnstyles, as part of an international internship in which I was also working for the marketing team for exits/entrances Epcot, and this is not MUCH different from some of the shyt that's going down now.

Now they're already scanning the biometrics of your fingerprints and imprinting it on the cards/tickets - this will just be a bracelet.

Thanks for the insight and info.
 

Mowgli

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LOL I don't even know. Ole boy tried to called me a mark and I just found the gif of someone getting kicked in the face. It is vicious tho...:ohlawd:

Kick blocked and transitioned into single leg take down where i stand over you, wave my finger and say
SCARY-MARINE.gif


My battle cry makes trees leafless.
 

newarkhiphop

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:shaq: i heard supermarkets and hospitals are next , you want quicker access just need the mark.
 

TLR Is Mental Poison

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The Opposite Of Elliott Wilson's Mohawk
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/07/b...et-meant-to-build-loyalty-and-sales.html?_r=0


At Disney Parks, a Bracelet Meant to Build Loyalty (and Sales)
By BROOKS BARNES
Published: January 7, 2013

ORLANDO, Fla. — Imagine Walt Disney World with no entry turnstiles. Cash? Passé: Visitors would wear rubber bracelets encoded with credit card information, snapping up corn dogs and Mickey Mouse ears with a tap of the wrist. Smartphone alerts would signal when it is time to ride Space Mountain without standing in line.


MagicBands will function as a room key, ticket and more.
Related


Fantasyland? Hardly. It happens starting this spring.

Disney in the coming months plans to begin introducing a vacation management system called MyMagic+ that will drastically change the way Disney World visitors — some 30 million people a year — do just about everything.

The initiative is part of a broader effort, estimated by analysts to cost between $800 million and $1 billion, to make visiting Disney parks less daunting and more amenable to modern consumer behavior. Disney is betting that happier guests will spend more money.

“If we can enhance the experience, more people will spend more of their leisure time with us,” said Thomas O. Staggs, chairman of Disney Parks and Resorts.

The ambitious plan moves Disney deeper into the hotly debated terrain of personal data collection. Like most major companies, Disney wants to have as much information about its customers’ preferences as it can get, so it can appeal to them more efficiently. The company already collects data to use in future sales campaigns, but parts of MyMagic+ will allow Disney for the first time to track guest behavior in minute detail.

Did you buy a balloon? What attractions did you ride and when? Did you shake Goofy’s hand, but snub Snow White? If you fully use MyMagic+, databases will be watching, allowing Disney to refine its offerings and customize its marketing messages.

Disney is aware of potential privacy concerns, especially regarding children. The plan, which comes as the federal government is trying to strengthen online privacy protections, could be troublesome for a company that some consumers worry is already too controlling.

But Disney has decided that MyMagic+ is essential. The company must aggressively weave new technology into its parks — without damaging the sense of nostalgia on which the experience depends — or risk becoming irrelevant to future generations, Mr. Staggs said. From a business perspective, he added, MyMagic+ could be “transformational.”

Aside from benefiting Disney’s bottom line, the initiative could alter the global theme parks business. Disney is not the first vacation company to use wristbands equipped with radio frequency identification, or RFID, chips. Great Wolf Resorts, an operator of 11 water parks in North America, has been using them since 2006. But Disney’s global parks operation, which has an estimated 121.4 million admissions a year and generates $12.9 billion in revenue, is so huge that it can greatly influence consumer behavior.

“When Disney makes a move, it moves the culture,” said Steve Brown, chief operating officer for Lo-Q, a British company that provides line management and ticketing systems for theme parks and zoos.

Disney World guests currently plod through entrance turnstiles, redeeming paper tickets, and then decide what to ride; food and merchandise are bought with cash or credit cards. (Disney hotel key cards can also be used to charge items.) People race to FastPass kiosks, which dispense a limited number of free line-skipping tickets. But gridlock quickly sets in and most people wait. And wait.

In contrast, MyMagic+ will allow users of a new Web site and app — called My Disney Experience — to preselect three FastPasses before they leave home for rides or V.I.P. seating for parades, fireworks and character meet-and-greets. Orlando-bound guests can also preregister for RFID bracelets. These so-called MagicBands will function as room key, park ticket, FastPass and credit card.

MagicBands can also be encoded with all sorts of personal details, allowing for more personalized interaction with Disney employees. Before, the employee playing Cinderella could say hello only in a general way. Now — if parents opt in — hidden sensors will read MagicBand data, providing information needed for a personalized greeting: “Hi, Angie,” the character might say without prompting. “I understand it’s your birthday.”
I dont see the problem. Disney is a private company, they are free to track their customers as they choose

You dont like it don't go to Disneyland
 
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