I can think of no instance at Disney where a flash is required except in certain pavilions or close up outdoors at night. On rides, you ruin everyone's ride; at dinner you annoy all the diners, at night 90% of what people are using the flash for is too far away anyways.
I have on POC turned around and flashed someone behind me right in the eyes after asking 3 times and the 20th flash.
Dark rides are called dark rides for a reason but can Disney really further ruin other guests ride experiences by stopping the ride to catch one culprit? There has to be a less intrusive way...
I voted No because it won't happen. I didn't vote no because I do it all the time. I don't ever see people using their flash during dark rides so it doesn't bother me any.
With how cheap point and shoot cameras are today, it's no wonder that many people handle them without actually knowing how to work them or some of the basics about taking photos. This is what the issue ultimately boils down to...lack of education about photography and courtesy. Many people don't realize that if and object is farther than 10ft away from the camera and it's pitch black that the picture won't turn out...so they just keep trying and trying and hope that one will turn out. You know...as long as it has 17MP it will take a good picture...because that's all that matters...my camera has more MEGAPIXELS than yours!
I'm so glad someone has said something. Its becoming extremly distracting too when your at a show and someone is using there Iphone to video the show. (little mermaid) Its like a light shining in your face the whole time.
If your thinking it is stated you CANNOT use cameras people still do it. However, I told the people to stop. Oh yes I did. They did stop.
that's what I said... but I'm a "snob", apparently standards are pretty low in these parts
Again - what relevance does PREVENTING it from happening have to do with the idea of ENFORCING a policy?
We can't PREVENT a crime from happening, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't have enforcement of the law if it's broken.
Prevention is really moot.
Impact of the enforcement on the actual ride experience is what actually matters. Not if it's physically possible to prevent it or not.
It's not the tool.. it's the user. .
Yes, because only P&S owners don't know anything about photography or courtesy...
Ignorance is independent of one's camera choice. The only difference is how much money the soccer mom threw at the camera. There is no education standard to buy a camera with interchangeable lens either...
I see just as many people use flash when not allowed with their DSLRs at the kid's gymnastics meets too.
It's not the tool.. it's the user. And cheap point and shoots have existed long before any of us had digital cameras of any sorts. So this isn't a new phenomenon.
the thing that really bugs me is how people actually justify filming dark, indoor attractions.
1.) you have no method of stabilizing that camera... unless you somehow have hands of steel that never vibrate
2.) you're using a crude tool to capture something that demands intricate and expensive equipment
3.) what is the real value of you shooting it? I mean honestly, do people actually use their phone and then say, wow this is amazing quality eh?
so once again, you've ruined peoples experiences to capture something mediocre at best.
Prevention is the key here, and far from "moot." Preventing it from happening goes to the heart of what guests are apparently finding discomfort with - flashing
If all of the remedies being considered focus only on what to do after the fact, then it won't solve the problem (of interrupting the integrity of the show and guest experience). If you look at the news and follow things that are happening (or not happening) in the political arena, you'll see a lot of this "after the fact" attitude to "fixing" problems. Sure, that's one approach, but it's the least effective approach.
That's what I said....hyperbole and sarcasm aside. The relative inexpensiveness of cameras nowadays puts many more of them in the hands of people who don't know how to use them (whether iphones, cheap p&s, or DSLRs). I do doubt that there are many people who don't know what they're doing who are opting for the $2000 DSLR over the $700 DSLR.
As to your last point...while true, the digital camera age has added to it...no longer do you only have 24 pictures that you can take (better not waste them!) and then have to pay to see how they turned out. You can take as many as you want now for relatively no extended cost past the initial purchase of your camera. So I imagine that onboard photography has increased tremendiously over the past decade.
And by should they, I mean, should they toss the ignoramouses who insist on ruining the ride experience for the rest of us?
So the problem of 'you cant prevent it' really is moot. It's not a requirement to pursue the goal. The government can't PREVENT me from punching you, but the government has successfully kept me from punching you by discouraging me from doing so because of the consequences of doing so.
Oh, I get it now. You're a proponent of the theory of deterrence within the realm of our criminal justice system. Okay, you're entitled to that opinion, and there has long been - and forever will be - debate on exactly that issue.
While the criminal justice system "enforces" our laws, as you pointed out, there are still a plethora of crimes being committed every moment of every day. But if you're satisfied with potential punishment as deterrence and therefore adequate enforcement, in both the criminal justice system and theme park attraction policies, so be it.
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