Anonymous wrote:Economy tickets will disappear as well. In a few years, airlines will only seel you premium tickets.
Blame your government. They don't have your interest in mind
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes you can get around this by using a VPN in West Virginia or Mississippi to order the tickets or book a flight.
Walk me through exactly how I would do this
Could I use a travel agent in another part of the country and would that help me?
Anonymous wrote:Dynamic pricing that's popular with hotels etc is coming to a service near you. In a few years, you won't see how much items cost anymore. The price will be determined in real time and based on your profile. Thanks to AI and your extensive digital footprint corporations will have access to a vast amount of data to determine how much to charge you. You will find it everywhere, clothing, food, car etc...
How did we get here? Where is the pushback?
And when you add health care cost on top of everything, is the goal to make us to spend in perpetuity and having nothing saved.
If you think you have enough saved, under dynamic pricing you will simply overpay.
Sometimes you can get around this by using a VPN in West Virginia or Mississippi to order the tickets or book a flight.
Can't you get around this by using an incognito browsing window?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know how we got here: a hyper capitalist society that values profits over everything, turns a blind eye to the ways technology is used to eliminate privacy and overcome consumer protections, and the demonizing of any movement designed to protect workers or consumers over the interests of business owners/capitalists.
Europe illustrates what pushback looks like: consumer protections with teeth, real suspicion of tech companies who collect and sell consumer data, structural changes to create a voice for workers and consumers (like forcing corporate boards to reserve seats for worker reps or consumer advocates, or creating legal causes of action against tech companies for collecting and selling user data).
But Europeans, culturally, value things like livability and workers rights. Some Americans value these things but many Americans are brainwashed by TV and social media into viewing those priorities with suspicion.
Europe actually employs dynamic pricing for many things…you just may view it differently because it’s progressive.
As an example, there was a Nokia founder who was ticketed for speeding and had to pay a 275,000 Euro ticket because he was a billionaire, while an everyday person would have received a 50 Euro ticket for the exact same violation.
Anonymous wrote:You know how we got here: a hyper capitalist society that values profits over everything, turns a blind eye to the ways technology is used to eliminate privacy and overcome consumer protections, and the demonizing of any movement designed to protect workers or consumers over the interests of business owners/capitalists.
Europe illustrates what pushback looks like: consumer protections with teeth, real suspicion of tech companies who collect and sell consumer data, structural changes to create a voice for workers and consumers (like forcing corporate boards to reserve seats for worker reps or consumer advocates, or creating legal causes of action against tech companies for collecting and selling user data).
But Europeans, culturally, value things like livability and workers rights. Some Americans value these things but many Americans are brainwashed by TV and social media into viewing those priorities with suspicion.
Anonymous wrote:I push back by not making the purchase.
Anonymous wrote:Isnt there restaurant(s) doing this now? Items cost more at certain times? I feel like I heard about this but can't recall.