An FYI to folk booking tickets online: if you notice price jumps between the first time you look and when you are ready to book, delete cache and empty cookies.
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@CStamp I haven't tested this but I hear if you book the same flight from a different country/area it could change price also. That sounds confusing but say you want a flight from Dallas to NY. If you book while in Dallas you will get one price but if you use a VPN to connect from say Colombia and try to book the same flight you could get a lower price.
As I said, I didn't test it but airline fees are stupid and inconsistent.
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@WeirdWriter @CStamp That's so bad. Just squeezing their customer base until there's nothing left. That's how capitalism works.
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An FYI to folk booking tickets online: if you notice price jumps between the first time you look and when you are ready to book, delete cache and empty cookies. The airline deleted their post a short time later because someone was being too helpful.
Name it what you will, it's gouging no matter what!
It is unethical and immoral and these common criminals belong behind bars. The End -
An FYI to folk booking tickets online: if you notice price jumps between the first time you look and when you are ready to book, delete cache and empty cookies. The airline deleted their post a short time later because someone was being too helpful.
@CStamp While you are at it, please consider the full range of ways you are being stolen from:
https://www.deceptive.design/ -
An FYI to folk booking tickets online: if you notice price jumps between the first time you look and when you are ready to book, delete cache and empty cookies. The airline deleted their post a short time later because someone was being too helpful.
@CStamp oh that's Evil
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@luckychronic @kkarhan @CStamp @Bundesverband you can exploit this too - about 10 min before I need to go I start checking bolt and uber and then stop and give algorithm some time to give me the best price;)
@DMTomas @luckychronic @kkarhan@jorts.horse @Bundesverband Take a cab. Surge pricing IS evil.
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Just a reminder of something I think about every time I se a Trivago ad. Why do hotels offer the same rooms at different prices on different websites. Why do customers put up with it. And shouldn't the lowest price be on the hotel's website which would encourage customers to go there first.
@the5thColumnist I think some of that has to do with how much the company charges the hotels to list them. For the hotels, it’s a way to be discovered. When I travelled more, I would use something like Expedia to find a place, then book directly with the hotel. Their prices were typically lower “in person” and I liked that they didn’t have to give away part of their profits. (I rarely stayed in a big chain hotel.)
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An FYI to folk booking tickets online: if you notice price jumps between the first time you look and when you are ready to book, delete cache and empty cookies. The airline deleted their post a short time later because someone was being too helpful.
@CStamp I've noticed this on basically every website I've ever bought things from that wasn't a mom and pop shop. This is the first time I've seen a company admit to doing it. Keep an eye out for the writing style of their social media to change in case they sack the person who said this.
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An FYI to folk booking tickets online: if you notice price jumps between the first time you look and when you are ready to book, delete cache and empty cookies. The airline deleted their post a short time later because someone was being too helpful.
@CStamp
Airlines have been doing this forever. It's not like it's a secret. -
@CStamp For me the biggest surprise is that they make it that easy. I had been under the impression most of these companies were using IP addresses, geolocation, advanced browser fingerprinting, and search history correlation to identify people even across cache clears and different browsers.
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@CStamp For me the biggest surprise is that they make it that easy. I had been under the impression most of these companies were using IP addresses, geolocation, advanced browser fingerprinting, and search history correlation to identify people even across cache clears and different browsers.
@diazona @CStamp that stuff requires more infrastructure on their side, like databases to store your identifiers.. while valuable for ad companies, presumably it doesn't make they cut for airlines.. so they do the easier thing and just store information in your browser (cache, local storage, index db, cookies) .. that's my guess
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An FYI to folk booking tickets online: if you notice price jumps between the first time you look and when you are ready to book, delete cache and empty cookies. The airline deleted their post a short time later because someone was being too helpful.
@CStamp @artbysarahsammis would using an incognito window work?
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@oscherler @CStamp heh, well, I can appreciate the spirit of this even if I don't think I really get it
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An FYI to folk booking tickets online: if you notice price jumps between the first time you look and when you are ready to book, delete cache and empty cookies. The airline deleted their post a short time later because someone was being too helpful.
@CStamp Mr Incredible? That you?
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@oscherler @CStamp heh, well, I can appreciate the spirit of this even if I don't think I really get it
@diazona There’s nothing deep to get. I started typing “they’re evil, not necessarily competent,” and in my head it sounded like a line in a comedy TV show, a bit like a cross between “I mean, it's one banana, Michael. What could it cost? 10 dollars?” from Arrested Development and common tension-resolving jokes like “we’re criminals, not monsters,” and I just liked how it sounded.
@CStamp -
@Kraemer_HB
No, not normally for endconsumers. We go to a supermarket and are all offered the exact same price. Similarly, phone and electricity companies publish their rate sheets and basically everyone gets the same price. Same goes for restaurants, bars, cafes.@utrenkner @Kraemer_HB @david_chisnall @coba @CStamp Supermarkets do it indirectly based upon
- Location
- Size of store (were you willing to go to a big store for lower pricing)
- Whether you ordered online and urgency
- What 'offers' they gave you to analyse your price sensitivity
- Totally artificial product segmentation "value" "taste the difference" secret company owned brands etc
- Whether you've sold your privacy with a store cardSegmentation is the same thing just not so finessed
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@Kraemer_HB
Coupons, bonus programs etc. are not directly connected to my "willingness to pay".@coba mentioned "apple used to be more expensive because people buying apple products have more money." And this is how I understood this discussion: Should the company be allowed to differentiate the price based on the (perceived) willingness to pay of an individual.
@utrenkner @Kraemer_HB @david_chisnall @coba @CStamp Apple prices are higher because people who buy Apple products are willing to spend more money to appear rich, and they have to be set at a certain value to keep that perception.
Rich people generally don't buy fashion brands because they have nothing to prove.
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@david_chisnall
Furthermore, I do not agree that price discrimination is bad per se ("predatory").E.g. if you have only 10 seats left for a certain train connection, the uniform price per seat might be 150 EUR. For the train company it may be financially beneficial to sell 8 tickets at 150 and to keep two tickets unsold.
But they might have fulfilled more people's transportation needs by selling the remaining two tickets to someone who would afford only 100 EUR.
@utrenkner @david_chisnall @Kraemer_HB @coba @CStamp Unfortunately in the UK we now have housebuilders essentially playing this same game with housebuilding - creating artificial massive demand by banking land not building on it so that they can sell awful houses on postage stamp lots at massive prices.
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@utrenkner @Kraemer_HB @david_chisnall @coba @CStamp Apple prices are higher because people who buy Apple products are willing to spend more money to appear rich, and they have to be set at a certain value to keep that perception.
Rich people generally don't buy fashion brands because they have nothing to prove.
@etchedpixels Sometimes people buy Apple products because it’s what works best for them. It doesn’t mean they throw money away on everything. @utrenkner @Kraemer_HB @david_chisnall @coba