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 worked in the business and there is not a single solution. For example, some booking systems increase the price based on the total number of the queries. Clearing the browser and going through reservation as the new customer would not help at all.
@filipslusarski That is good to know, thanks.
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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.
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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 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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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 same thing happens with hotels and untaxed hotels. But they also up prices when people search a lot or can't make up their minds, eg. https://www.airbnb.com/help/article/1168 so clearing cache might also make it worse (or, from Airbnb's perspective, better)
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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 this is really something i like about direct bookings with lufthansa/austrian, at least in central europe.
same price, all the time. no matter what device/ISP and number of requests.
not the cheapest, but reliable pricing.
cc @koehntopp
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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 Wait until you hear about what they put into the atmosphere. That’s some really crazy shit.
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@luckychronic @CStamp Where?
Cuz if it hapoens in #Germany I'm shure #ConsumerProtection like @Bundesverband would love to know...
@kkarhan @CStamp @Bundesverband idk about Germany, in Spain it happens. Try to search several times for the same flight, its price should go up. If you try tell me because it would be interesting to know if it depends on the country
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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 same for train tickets. too many people looking at the same tickets changes the price. the many people could be you looking again and again...
sometimes it´s cheaper to book until the next city across the boarder because their are cheaper EU travel tickets.
mobile apps tend to be more expensive then using a desktop. apple used to be more expensive because people buying apple products have more money.
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@kkarhan I hope they make it so here.
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@luckychronic @CStamp Where?
Cuz if it hapoens in #Germany I'm shure #ConsumerProtection like @Bundesverband would love to know...
@kkarhan @luckychronic @CStamp @Bundesverband all I find for DE is a case against Amazon based on scraping price data from elsewhere. If their algorithm does not use prices from other vendors (directly?) then they can modify price dynamically. As far as I could find
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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 also read that prices vary depending on the device you use and your location... AKA: more expensive for someone with expensive tech gear in an affluent country. I often do flight reservations with my 12 year old Macbook Air using a VPN from a country with a low GDP
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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 Try not flying.
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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.
Also, because browser fingerprinting is also a thing (i.e. sites IDing you based on the unique combo of info that your browser sends like time, window size, IP etc.), it could help to use a different device altogether.
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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 someone was being *human*
Can't have that
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@CStamp same for train tickets. too many people looking at the same tickets changes the price. the many people could be you looking again and again...
sometimes it´s cheaper to book until the next city across the boarder because their are cheaper EU travel tickets.
mobile apps tend to be more expensive then using a desktop. apple used to be more expensive because people buying apple products have more money.
It's worth differentiating the two classes of system. Demand-based pricing is fairly normal: if you can't meet demand, you need to reduce it somehow and putting up the price is how markets normally work.
Personalised pricing is about trying to pick the highest price that you, individually, are willing to pay. This is predatory behaviour and should be 100% illegal.
20+ years ago, these systems were great because they'd do demand pricing. They'd aim to have planes close to 100% full, so they'd increase the price if the flight was popular and lower it for unpopular flights. When you went to a dozen travel agents and looked at the same flight, they'd each put a lock on the flight to make sure that they could actually sell it to you. This would cause a strong demand signal and so the price would start. After a few days, they'd all release their lock, which the back-end system would interpret as a sudden drop in demand and lower the price to make up for it. If you timed it correctly, you could buy when the prices suddenly dropped.
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@CStamp Try not flying.
@CStamp
For a funeral is of course something different. I would not try to withold anyone from attending a funeral.My plea is to people planehopping for leisure. Stay at home, do something for your community, help the poor and your local economy.
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It's worth differentiating the two classes of system. Demand-based pricing is fairly normal: if you can't meet demand, you need to reduce it somehow and putting up the price is how markets normally work.
Personalised pricing is about trying to pick the highest price that you, individually, are willing to pay. This is predatory behaviour and should be 100% illegal.
20+ years ago, these systems were great because they'd do demand pricing. They'd aim to have planes close to 100% full, so they'd increase the price if the flight was popular and lower it for unpopular flights. When you went to a dozen travel agents and looked at the same flight, they'd each put a lock on the flight to make sure that they could actually sell it to you. This would cause a strong demand signal and so the price would start. After a few days, they'd all release their lock, which the back-end system would interpret as a sudden drop in demand and lower the price to make up for it. If you timed it correctly, you could buy when the prices suddenly dropped.
@david_chisnall @coba @CStamp I guess personalised pricing is in fact how markets normally work.
The seller tries to get as much as possible from the buyer in exchange for the product.
Think about bargaining, or discounts, or reduced product properties aimed at buyers that would not pay a higher price. -
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.
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@david_chisnall @coba @CStamp I guess personalised pricing is in fact how markets normally work.
The seller tries to get as much as possible from the buyer in exchange for the product.
Think about bargaining, or discounts, or reduced product properties aimed at buyers that would not pay a higher price.@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.
