What would you do if a friend told you of a great way to collect FF miles into your account, but at the end of the day it is fraudalent? I am not specifically sure if it is against the law, but it definitely violates the TOS for the airline FF program.
Do you just talk to them, do you report them or do you do nothing?
(Note to Mods - not sure if milesbuzz is the right forum, but since it relates to miles I thought it should go here, if not feel free to move as appropriate)
wharvey
Jul 5, 04, 2:20 pm
I certainly would not participate.
I would tell them of the potential consequences if they get caught.
Of course, if they are getting miles fraudently (spelling?), then there could actually be some legal ramifications.
William
Master
Jul 5, 04, 2:47 pm
I would definitely not snitch on anyone. The only crimes I might report are those involving death or grievous bodily harm (incl. rape), and I would not be sure whom to report them to, considering the level of corrupt police(wo)men -- especially the marauding murdering morons in the so-called intelligence and secret services of all countries.
I probably would not participate in a fraud unless it is obviously once in a lifetime option.
I might participate if it is an airline/miles granting body I do not plan to use legitimately ever in the future, but even so only if it is only against the agreement, but by no means against the law. But the motivation would have to be truly substantial.
This is not because I have higher moral standards than the others, but because it takes an effort to take part in a fraud. -- Much easier being legal.
T-Man
Jul 5, 04, 2:51 pm
Sounds like a moral dilemma. To fraudulently collect miles - well, for me, it would be a bad idea. If nothing else, the guilt or the concern over being busted would almost certainly overshadow almost any benefit.
I agree with Master - it's much easier being legal.
But in the end, what can you live with?
MapleLeaf
Jul 5, 04, 2:58 pm
It is not a question of me collecting the miles fraudently, I only collect them legally (Divinity student here :) ). My main question was do I talk to this friend, ignore it or go as far as reporting him to the airline?
Right now I am leaning to letting him know my thoughts and counsel against it, but not reporting him. It never crossed my mind to join him and pad my accounts, as much as I would like to.
wldtrvlr
Jul 5, 04, 3:23 pm
As you know. Everything is open to interpretation and the airlines are the final judge when it comes to their Terms and Conditions. At times things will put up on this board that some call fraudelent, some call unethical, and others call normal.
My feeling is this. If it truly is fraudulent it won't take long for the airlines to figure it out. Miles are not FREE, whoever is "giving" them to you has to buy them from the airline. I am sure there are ways to illegally "buy" these miles, like hacking into the airlines computers, but generally they have pretty good systems to prevent that.
I think if I were you I would discuss it with your friend and make sure that his understanding and your understanding of the situation are the same AND that his/your understanding of the situation is accurate. Go to the website or view the material or whatever he is using to get the miles. There might be some fine print your friend has not read or understood. When you both fully understand it; if you still feel it is fraudulent I would explain to him that he could loose his account and any legitimate miles he has earned.
Then I would forget about it and go on with life.
RunawayNFly
Jul 6, 04, 8:41 am
It truly is a no-win situation for you.
I agree that I would not participate and you already said that that never was an issue. Even if he was a not a friend of yours, I would not report him to anyone because you could don't have proof that he actually did what he proposed (unless he showed you the mileage statement.)
I would definitely counsel him about the situation. You are in a better position than most friends since you are a divinity student as well as his friend. It would bother me as an individual that he was thinking/ planning on doing this. You need to be prepared to lose him as a friend, even if you did absolutely nothing. I certainly would have trouble looking at him straight in the eye and continuing my friendship, under the circumstances, even if I tried to forgive him. That's just me, though!
FlyWithoutWings
Jul 6, 04, 10:10 am
I think it would help if you could give us the details of how your friend is getting these miles fraudulently. If you could just give us the step-by-step procedures along with some weblinks to make it easier for us (to understand), it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
scirel
Jul 6, 04, 11:04 am
The consensus seems to be that this behavior is wrong, or unethical, or (at the least) "dangerous" in the sense that your FF account could be terminated. In fact, if you asked this question of most FTers in the way posed here, I suspect that most (myself included) would respond negatively to the idea.
That being said, the Coupon Connection forum has lots and lots of people trading all kinds of items that are, no doubt, listed as "non-transferrable" or selling/trading things that aren't supposed to be bartered. (There seems to be a line drawn at the outright selling of miles, but my impression is that there's a lot of other trading going on that clearly violates stated rules.) So it seems that some folks, in general, are willing to bend/break terms & conditions to some degree. I'm not talking about interpretations of convoluted or vague rules -- we all know that these are rampant in the industry and everyone has their own take on these. But more often than not it's clear that something is against the rules and folks do it anyway.
I don't bring this up to accuse anyone, lay blame, or even state a moral objection. My point is simply that many people who, at first blush, would object to "stealing" miles or other subversive tactics, might have some tolerance level for going outside the strictly allowable.
ohbahsan
Jul 6, 04, 11:18 am
i was in a similar situation with a friend who was involved in some shady retail
practices. he knows it's illegal but he can justify it so there is not much use
talking sense to him, and believe me i've tried. being a man of loose morals
myself i didn't report my friend's fradulent activities, but i can see how someone
with strong beliefs might struggle with this dilemma.
now if i was an enterprising individual, i might find some way to blackmail this
supposed friend ;)
NewTraveler
Jul 6, 04, 12:13 pm
There are many people out there who know of ways to beat the house when playing at a casino. Technically, it's not even cheating, and I personally think there is nothing wrong or illegal about counting cards, you're not hurting any of the other poor folks playing, you're just cutting into the casino's profit, which has been coming from my wallet for years. But, if you do it and get caught, the casinos will ban you from even walking in to any of their establishments.
If you do actually cheat at a casino, by either having an inside man, palming chips, etc. Then you'll be arrested along with your cohorts and still be banned from the casinos.
My guess is your friend's system is wrong but not illegal. These gaps tend to be figured out very quickly by the airline, so it probably wont last. If you really feel a need to take some kind of action, call the customer service center for whatever company your friend is taking advantage of and ask them if it would be alright to do what he's doing. If they have any common sense, they'll fix the glitch. If they don't mind, then you can go publish his system here on FT.
Just my two cents.
-Matt
Efrem
Jul 6, 04, 12:26 pm
Part of the problem is that everyone has a different definition of "fraudulent" unless it's specifically against a law, which the OP said this isn't. For example, suppose you're rerouted involuntarily on a different airline than the one you booked, and you are also a member of that airline's FF program. You give them their number and get miles for the flight you took. Then you ask the first airline for miles for the flight you booked and probably get them too. Some would call this fraudulent. Others would call it "playing the game" or fair compensation for the inconvenience of the reroute. I'm not coming down on either side of this example, not saying that people who won't take double miles have the moral high ground, just saying that my fraud may not be yours or vice versa.
So it is with a lot of the mileage-earning schemes that have been discussed here and elsewhere. Is buying a gift certificate with a mileage-earning credit card and redeeming it for cash (perhaps minus a trivial purchase) fraudulent? It isn't what the people who set up the rules had in mind, it's taking advantage of them, it's costing them whatever they pay for miles or for accepting a credit card, but is it fraudulent? I don't know. In this case I'd say it isn't as long as the rules allow each individual step in the process, even if the end result is to get miles that the store didn't plan to give you at its expense, but others would differ.
What this comes down to is, without knowing more about the scheme/scam, I can't say how hard I'd be on the person who proposed it. If I thought it really crossed the line with no wiggle room, I'd probably say "I just wouldn't feel comfortable doing that" and drop it.
The sad part is that this might end the friendship by revealing a side of the "friend's" character I hadn't known about previously.
holtju2
Jul 6, 04, 12:35 pm
Maybe you could elaborate. I cannot tell if I think that something is fraudulent without knowing a bit more (and perhaps collecting few miles for myself too ;) ).
Quite often people have different opinions what is "fraudulent" and what is not. Do you think that it was fraudulent to purchase $20 tickets to KEF or $20 tickets to all European destinations? Is it fraudulent to puchase gift cards to get miles and then cash the giftcards? Someones dog took a test drive last year to collect 10000 BA miles in his masters account. Was it fraudulent?
I tend to agree with the poster above. The airlines/companies have total control over their respective programs.
Ken in Phx
Jul 6, 04, 3:09 pm
Quite often people have different opinions what is "fraudulent" and what is not. Do you think that it was fraudulent to purchase $20 tickets to KEF or $20 tickets to all European destinations?
No. Offer and acceptance.
Is it fraudulent to puchase gift cards to get miles and then cash the giftcards?
No. Offer and acceptance of a legal transaction.
Someones dog took a tst drive last year to collect 10000 BA miles in his masters account
Yes a fraudulent activity. The Dog never drove and the Flier purposely misled to earn the stated points.
Daedalus
Jul 6, 04, 5:05 pm
Quite often people have different opinions what is "fraudulent" and what is not. Do you think that it was fraudulent to purchase $20 tickets to KEF or $20 tickets to all European destinations?
No. Offer and acceptance.
Is it fraudulent to puchase gift cards to get miles and then cash the giftcards?
No. Offer and acceptance of a legal transaction.
Someones dog took a tst drive last year to collect 10000 BA miles in his masters account
Yes a fraudulent activity. The Dog never drove and the Flier purposely misled to earn the stated points.
Yes, it's a very fine line.
Last year there was a mistake made on Best Buy or Circuit City (one of those similar stores..). Anyway, you could purchase a digital camera online for $500 and when you added it to your Shopping Cart you got a 100% discount for it, meaning you only had to pay for S&H.
Was it legal? Yes. It was purely an 'offer and acceptance of a legal transaction'
Was it ethically right? Probably not, since it was not the intention of the seller.
PS The company in question received hundreds of said orders and cancelled them all once it realized the mistake - they did not honor any of them...
lili
Jul 6, 04, 5:25 pm
Yes, it's a very fine line.
Last year there was a mistake made on Best Buy or Circuit City (one of those similar stores..). ...
PS The company in question received hundreds of said orders and cancelled them all once it realized the mistake - they did not honor any of them...
Must have been Fry's :)
Braindrain
Jul 6, 04, 6:18 pm
Do you think that it was fraudulent to purchase... or $20 tickets to all European destinations?
Did I miss this? I remember seeing the $20 to KEF but to all European destinations? :confused:
holtju2
Jul 6, 04, 6:25 pm
Did I miss this? I remember seeing the $20 to KEF but to all European destinations? :confused:
Yes. December or November 2002 BA mistakenly loaded $20 fares in WT+ from all of their US gateways to all European destinations. The deal was good for few hours on that Friday evening.
Flea
Jul 7, 04, 1:44 am
A friend of mine works for a FFP "fraud" dept. It is very interesting to hear all about the different scams and holes in the systems that are used.
It is amazing to hear that some people have earned millions of miles through fraudulent earning.... he was saying that when he calls to talk to these people to let them know that they have been caught etc that most of them have absolutely no remorse what so ever. Some even dispute the fact that they should have the accounts closed!!!
From what was said, fraud detection worth a lot of money to airlines so I imagine that it is only a matter of time before the loop-hole is closed.
I would not recomend taking him up on his offer as you will probably loose the account, miles, status and possibly more.
YOWkid
Jul 7, 04, 3:13 am
Did I miss this? I remember seeing the $20 to KEF but to all European destinations? :confused:
To add to the stories... Remember TG and their mess up with their LHR-BKK fare that fine April/May day last year? You could book a LHR-BKK in any cabin class (so you would have been dumb not to have booked F) and all you had to do was pay the airport taxes, which was aorund 50GBP if I remember correctly.
They didn't honour it, unfortunately... :mad: But if they did, that would have been a real blast! (It was towards the end of the SARS epidemic and some people actually thought that this was for real and not an error.)
FlyWithoutWings
Jul 7, 04, 7:39 am
A friend of mine works for a FFP "fraud" dept. It is very interesting to hear all about the different scams and holes in the systems that are used.
It is amazing to hear that some people have earned millions of miles through fraudulent earning.... he was saying that when he calls to talk to these people to let them know that they have been caught etc that most of them have absolutely no remorse what so ever. Some even dispute the fact that they should have the accounts closed!!!
From what was said, fraud detection worth a lot of money to airlines so I imagine that it is only a matter of time before the loop-hole is closed.
I would not recomend taking him up on his offer as you will probably loose the account, miles, status and possibly more.
Please advise us of some of the more lucrative schemes that have been uncomvered, and how the abuser "slipped up" allowing them to be caught. Thanks. ;)
the happy booker
Jul 7, 04, 8:02 am
Please advise us of some of the more lucrative schemes that have been uncomvered, and how the abuser "slipped up" allowing them to be caught. Thanks. ;)
Remember the AC agent at LHR, last year? Maybe not a big one, but did you also notice how the airline sort of swept it under the carpet? My point is, these things are going on from somewhere inside the airline, too. So even if you report it, chances are nothing will be done about it unless the media gets wind of it. Then a little cosmetic glossing over until it disappears, and it's business as usual for everyone, including the perpetrators. Trust me. Better to simply voice concerns to the friend.
MapleLeaf
Jul 7, 04, 10:25 am
What has been disclosed to me is two fold.
For hotels etc., this person unplugs a lamp or something then heads down to the front desk complaining that the said lamp (now in his hands), caused him to get a shock. As a result of this mistreatment he either wants a free stay or a ton of hotel points for compensation and does not leave the desk until they give him something. BTW there is nothing wrong with the lamp.
The second thing he is doing is flying airline A, crediting the miles to airline B, then using an online missing points interface to still collect the miles in airline A's program. In essence double dipping.
Neither sits well with me. I am always ready to take advantage of misloaded fares etc., but this is outright deception or fraud, IMO.
PlatAAagain
Jul 7, 04, 10:42 am
What has been disclosed to me is two fold.
For hotels etc., this person unplugs a lamp or something then heads down to the front desk complaining that the said lamp (now in his hands), caused him to get a shock. As a result of this mistreatment he either wants a free stay or a ton of hotel points for compensation and does not leave the desk until they give him something. BTW there is nothing wrong with the lamp.
The second thing he is doing is flying airline A, crediting the miles to airline B, then using an online missing points interface to still collect the miles in airline A's program. In essence double dipping.
Neither sits well with me. I am always ready to take advantage of misloaded fares etc., but this is outright deception or fraud, IMO.
Neither of the two is legal (both frauds IMHO), but both are borderline stupid if applied more than once in this day of computerized records...
I guarantee that the lamp-shock trick is recorded in someone's database by now, along with you friend's name, and sooner or later, he'll be found out. Then who knows? It could be that nothing happens, or it could lead to a ride to the local police station in the back of the car (never a good thing). Do this in some countries, and the local cops might beat the living (mushroom) out of you along the way.
As far as double dipping, this is a common ploy, which is usually discovered by the airline's auditing procedures. It may take a while (like a year or two) for them to catch it, but once they do, the least they will do is close your buddy's accounts, thus forfeiting the earned (and unearned) miles and again, this could also lead to jail time, although it's unlikely.
I wouldn't risk being caught doing either one (even if I were devoid of morality), because the risk/reward ratio is so out of whack. There are enough legitimate ways to earn miles, to attempt fraud is just not worth it.
I'd advise your friend to cease and desist, and to hope he doesn't get caught. Since no bodily harm was involved, I wouldn't rat him out to the companies involved, however.
IANAL, of course (I Am Not A Lawyer).
-Plat
FlyWithoutWings
Jul 7, 04, 3:44 pm
For hotels etc., this person unplugs a lamp or something then heads down to the front desk complaining that the said lamp (now in his hands), caused him to get a shock. As a result of this mistreatment he either wants a free stay or a ton of hotel points for compensation and does not leave the desk until they give him something. BTW there is nothing wrong with the lamp.
I worked at a (nice, but non-chain) hotel in college. They never gave us any official training on this sort of thing, but even as a stupid college kid, the difference between a legitimate complaint and a concocted complaint was typically blatantly obvious. The hotels know exactly what is going on with this type of customer. Knows they are going to have them. And knows that the rest of us have to pay more to cover these cheapskates. Its just a cost of doing business.
My question is why does your friend stop with hotels & airlines. Slip & fall works at every retail business in the U.S. and you can always find a guy like John Edwards to take your case.
GUWonder
Jul 7, 04, 8:12 pm
I worked at a (nice, but non-chain) hotel in college. They never gave us any official training on this sort of thing, but even as a stupid college kid, the difference between a legitimate complaint and a concocted complaint was typically blatantly obvious. The hotels know exactly what is going on with this type of customer. Knows they are going to have them. And knows that the rest of us have to pay more to cover these cheapskates. Its just a cost of doing business.
My question is why does your friend stop with hotels & airlines. Slip & fall works at every retail business in the U.S. and you can always find a guy like John Edwards to take your case.
Or you could always try and find a guy like Dick Cheney and get your company and yourself a few lucrative government contracts... and then every last tax-paying American pay to cover the cost of the sleazeballs. ;)
I remember hearing a story of a guy in college who said he was going to let loose a pet mouse into his hotel room and then call up the hotel staff and complain about a rodent. I don't know if he ever did do that.
aussielori
Jul 7, 04, 8:34 pm
As far as double dipping, this is a common ploy, which is usually discovered by the airline's auditing procedures. It may take a while (like a year or two) for them to catch it, but once they do, the least they will do is close your buddy's accounts, thus forfeiting the earned (and unearned) miles and again, this could also lead to jail time, although it's unlikely.
IANAL, of course (I Am Not A Lawyer).
-Plat
JAIL TIME.
OH that is funny-for double dipping?
BruceWG
Jul 7, 04, 11:01 pm
Must have been Fry's :)
Couldn't be - other than the sad attempt with outpost.com Fry's hasn't figured out how to sell online :). You have to go to a store to truly "experience" Fry's!
AllanJ
Jul 8, 04, 8:01 am
In order for there to be fraud there must be the intent to deceive.
Buying gift cards or travelers checks for the miles and then cashing them in are two independent legal activities and therefore not fraud.
Back to back ticketing is against the rules for airlines that have such rules. But it is not fraud.
I remember hearing a story of a guy in college who said he was going to let loose a pet mouse into his hotel room and then call up the hotel staff and complain about a rodent. I don't know if he ever did do that.
Sounds like Strange Brew. 'We like found a mouse in this beer, eh?'
clacko
Jul 8, 04, 12:08 pm
back 10+ yrs ago, there were multiple benefit cc's that matched each other in treating balance transfers the same as a charge...for 3 or 4 months, i would charge everything to card 1, pay it off w/ a xfer check [iirc] to card 2 , etc...i didn't consider it fraud because it was announced & i was doing what they were promoting....however, i knew that their goal was to get interest on the xfered bal's & thought "make hay while the sun shines].
Boraxo
Jul 8, 04, 1:27 pm
Mapleleaf: Both of those schemes are fraudulent even under the most narrow use of that term.
Sooner or later your friend will get caught. I doubt he will face criminal prosecution (the police, at least in this country, have better things to do than to chase people claiming miles that they don't deserve), but he may very well be booted and banned from certain hotel properties and lose his cherished FF miles.
Why would someone who obviously treasures his FF miles risk losing all of them with these types of schemes? Then again, why did Martha risk losing millions by lying about a $60,000 stock trade? :rolleyes:
Penny wise, pound foolish.
Darren
Jul 8, 04, 2:39 pm
Sooner or later your friend will get caught. I doubt he will face criminal prosecution (the police, at least in this country, have better things to do than to chase people claiming miles that they don't deserve), but he may very well be booted and banned from certain hotel properties and lose his cherished FF miles.
I think it depends on the state. In NJ I can say that fraud like the lamp example is taken very seriously. Maybe they would prosecute, maybe they wouldnt, but there would at the very least be a legal headache. The second, probably not but I agree that the auditors would pick it up at some point.
outtolunch
Jul 8, 04, 4:06 pm
Back to back ticketing is against the rules for airlines that have such rules. But it is not fraud.
Yes it is.
clacko
Jul 8, 04, 6:27 pm
i have booked back to back flights for mr's, but have always booked w/ res & told them what i was doing...no problem....however, if i had been booted out of the program, i don't know what i would have done....i think i could have made a good case, they were always get off the plane and get back on, so more revenue for the a/l & wouldn't have done it otherwise for higher prices. however in circa 84 we did a lot of company travel [booked by co travel dept] of the wk1 mon-wk2 fri, wk1 fri home, wk2 mon back...all of us thought it made sense because we were focusing on the bottom line.
transpac
Jul 8, 04, 7:29 pm
What has been disclosed to me is two fold.
The second thing he is doing is flying airline A, crediting the miles to airline B, then using an online missing points interface to still collect the miles in airline A's program. In essence double dipping.
If someone told me they were doing this I would point out that this is against the terms and conditions of the frequent flyer program(s), and that there is a very high probablility this scheme will eventually be uncovered. Then they will lose all their miles in one or both programs. I doubt that the airline would prosecute or attempt to recover revenue from fraudulently accrued and redeemed miles? Then I'd leave it up to them to decide if they wanted to continue with this practice.
The lamp thing sounds like extortion to me but I'm no lawyer.
Edited to add;
a.) Double-dipping as a result of an involuntary re-route was, I thought, perfectly acceptable to both FF programs. I've never had to take advantage of this.
b.) Some FF programs have lower status thresholds for residents of certain countries. More than few people circumvent this by establishing a questionable or marginal domicile (a friend accepts their mail, they use a business address, etc.). I think this fraudulent.
c.) Some FF programs target offers to certain customers, based on their address, of competitive FF programs. Some of these programs are incredibly generous, maybe offering to match their mileage balance in the new program. Many people circumvent the residency requirements with a bogus address. I think this is fradulent.
Richelieu
Jul 9, 04, 12:12 pm
b.) Some FF programs have lower status thresholds for residents of certain countries. More than few people circumvent this by establishing a questionable or marginal domicile (a friend accepts their mail, they use a business address, etc.). I think this fraudulent.
c.) Some FF programs target offers to certain customers, based on their address, of competitive FF programs. Some of these programs are incredibly generous, maybe offering to match their mileage balance in the new program. Many people circumvent the residency requirements with a bogus address. I think this is fradulent.
I am not a lawyer and I doubt one would know the laws of every country were FFP are available, but reading this thread, I was wondering...
1. Is it legal somewhere to sell the same thing different prices based on the origin of the buyer ? Can a store say : you're from Canada, you'll pay more for the same products bought in the same conditions ? I don't know for sure, but I seem to remember that a store owner in Denmark was fined because he refused to sell his pizzas to German and French citizens. If he couldn't refuse to sell, I suppose he couldn't have made them pay ten times the price...
2. How is it different to sell the same products at different prices and selling a product (a plane ticket) the same price but granting different rebate based on the origin ?
I am not using a false address myself (partly because I usually reach top-tier in my home program without doing it) but I contemplate it often when I think to this practice of treating customers inequally. I know the rationale of trying to attract foreigners to your market, but anyway :(
ejmelton
Jul 9, 04, 2:26 pm
I am not a lawyer and I doubt one would know the laws of every country were FFP are available, but reading this thread, I was wondering...
1. Is it legal somewhere to sell the same thing different prices based on the origin of the buyer ? :(
Last month in LAS the price of the RIO's buffet depended on where you live. (The locals paid half price.) Chain stores (like Best Buy) regularly match local competitors' prices.
Is it legal?
QuietLion
Jul 9, 04, 3:33 pm
Museums frequently charge difference prices for residents and non-residents.
QL
ljr
Jul 12, 04, 9:18 am
Museums frequently charge difference prices for residents and non-residents.
QL
As do Harley and some auto dealerships.
ljr
Darren
Jul 12, 04, 9:54 am
I don't know for sure, but I seem to remember that a store owner in Denmark was fined because he refused to sell his pizzas to German and French citizens. If he couldn't refuse to sell, I suppose he couldn't have made them pay ten times the price...
Sorry if this posts twice because things are acting up here. That case is different because of the EU treaty, and generally, he couldnt do either.
mikesinla
Jul 12, 04, 10:23 pm
As do Harley and some auto dealerships.
ljr
and of course...
LADIES NIGHT!
ladies free....men 20 bucks to get in....and yet who gets stuck with the bar tab? That's why they call it Ladies Night.
My bitter side says that is FRAUD.
Disclosure: I am not a Lawyer...either.
;)
Richelieu
Jul 13, 04, 10:10 am
First, thank you all for the examples mentioned here, very instructive thread.
I have done my homework regarding the "different offer based on country on residence", and I have found something that might be of interest to all EU frequent flyer.
This inquiry resulted in airlines (esp. BA and SAS) to drop some fare discrepancies inside Europe. The next step would be to challenge FFP as a discriminating procedure. Of course, I realize that airlines will probably align their condition on their current worst offer, but at least it will be more acceptable. The lack of legal ground for this practice may be the reason airlines are not worrying too much about people with partially phony address of residence. I suppose most FF won't bother to it anyway.
Regarding ladies night,
http://writ.news.findlaw.com/grossman/20040615.html
and
http://www.calicocat.com/2004/06/ladies-night-is-unconstitutional.html
Apparently some people are inquiring into this. No need to get castrated to get free booze yet, I repeat, don't rush, you could regret this :)
After all, I fail to see a difference between "you must pay to enter because you're a man" and "you must pay to enter because you're black". In both case, you're discriminated against, because of something you are. But this is totally off-topic for the MilesBuzz forum, while the country of residence and FFP requirements is on-topic...
Master
Jul 13, 04, 5:21 pm
Museums frequently charge difference prices for residents and non-residents.
"frequently"??! Rather: "extremely seldom, but still it may happen occasionally".
Yet when it applies to non-federal city/municipality/county/province/federal unit-accredited museums it is more than logical, seeing that they are already partly supported from the taxes of the locals in the first place.
nako
Jul 13, 04, 5:22 pm
and of course...
LADIES NIGHT!
ladies free....men 20 bucks to get in....and yet who gets stuck with the bar tab? That's why they call it Ladies Night.
My bitter side says that is FRAUD.
Disclosure: I am not a Lawyer...either.
;)
Well, look at it this way. Women not spending $20 leaves them free to buy that much more alcohol. This, of course, has the potential of additional benefits that money just can't buy (at least legally, unless you're in Nevada). :D
Mike
mikesinla
Jul 13, 04, 9:10 pm
Well, look at it this way. Women not spending $20 leaves them free to buy that much more alcohol. This, of course, has the potential of additional benefits that money just can't buy (at least legally, unless you're in Nevada). :D
Mike
Continuing off topic...
So, Mike...is it a Reno custom that the ladies buy the drinks on LADIES NIGHT? :confused:
It sure isn't that way down here or in Vegas where it is always the Man's night to buy regardless of who got in free.
@:-) So in an effort to tie in the topic, I submit that Ladies night produces Fraudulent collection of drinks. Further, if said drinks were purchased on a mileage accumulation credit card then those miles were gained under fraudulent circumstances such as Ladies Night must be forfeited. @:-)
;)
Moderator2
Jul 13, 04, 11:42 pm
Let's continue "on topic" :)
Craig6z
Moderator - MilesBuzz & United
Marathon Man
Jul 14, 04, 7:01 am
the original question asked what I would do if someone told me about a miles-earning deal that turned out to be bogus.
What if that SOMEONE was a company or series of companies involved in a deal instead of a person who was telling you about it?
I know many here have heard of it before, but for those who have not, consider the recently botched promo on double +25% miles from Points.com that come from the very badly managed AA/Ebay Anything Points/oints.com deal. (You can find the info on that deal in the AA forum and look toward the end posts of the 'Get "UNLIMITED" AA miles for less than $0.01 per mile'" thread at:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/showthread.php?t=312953&goto=newpost
Many companies have seemingly knowingly ripped off many people on this very board of several thousands of miles! They did not post for many people and these were fo the deals people actually stuck with and bought something from! They did not post in time for others, and for no apparant reason except that points.com admits to having had a technical glitch with their systems that send points to and fro. So why do WE have to pay for that and lose out?
They got us to sign up for stuff and then it turned out the deals are bogus because a large percentage of them fail to come thru and you cannot get any acountability or answers about it from the sources. It took teath pulling to the max for those who did get any responses and results. To date, there are only a few of us who have been so lucky. I have written many places, including AA. Ithink the world of points management should about it and AA is the airline who ends up with the miles that come from this deal. I figured AA should be alerted as to the fact that many companies are using their namesake to run a fraudulent and misleading promotion for many customers who got ripped off by it.
AA is not the problem, just the end recipient. Wouldnt YOU want to know if this happened under your watch?
The deal is bogus and the companies involved stole our loyalty (friendship).
And that is fraud.
I hope they stop doing business.
This web site I made below throughly describes the entire issue and we have been launching a full scale attack against the perps. It's only just begun. These are entities and people I would definitely snitch on. They are no friend of mine. My friends are just people trying to get by. These companies have duped us badly.
For all the fine check out:
http://www.theothersideoftraveling.com
:)MM
battia
Jul 21, 04, 12:15 am
There is clearly much 'gray area' in life and all is open to interpretation. Nonetheless, the quandry over whether to turn in/report your friend seems like an oxymoron to me. If your friend is not making you complicit in his actions or exposing you to any potential ramifications.... where are you even coming from? If even you don't know the legality of it how can you consider reporting it just to see if the authorities oppose it? Very odd, indeed. Maybe if your friend was planning an armed robbery where lives were at stake and clear laws broken..... but a potentially illegal (which is a stretch for a vendor agreement such as ff programs)and in at least your opinion unethical plan? Sounds a little funky to me. :confused:
cjmx50
Jul 21, 04, 6:31 am
i guess i am interested in knowing what you finally decided to do? I believe your friend should be told how you feel about the issue. Of course, their soul is their own.
MapleLeaf
Jul 23, 04, 12:11 pm
My friend knows my thoughts... what he chooses to do from this point forward is up to him.
Peab0dy
Jul 25, 04, 5:21 am
Yes, it's a very fine line.
Last year there was a mistake made on Best Buy or Circuit City (one of those similar stores..). Anyway, you could purchase a digital camera online for $500 and when you added it to your Shopping Cart you got a 100% discount for it, meaning you only had to pay for S&H.
Was it legal? Yes. It was purely an 'offer and acceptance of a legal transaction'
Was it ethically right? Probably not, since it was not the intention of the seller.
PS The company in question received hundreds of said orders and cancelled them all once it realized the mistake - they did not honor any of them...
They did this with a rather powerful webmail "computer". You could do an easy modification to make it a fully functional computer. After realizing this, they altered the terms of use. Didn't really matter to those of us who already purchased the hackable boxes, even knowing that we were not going to use them for their intended purpose. :)
Peab0dy
Jul 25, 04, 5:37 am
Yes. December or November 2002 BA mistakenly loaded $20 fares in WT+ from all of their US gateways to all European destinations. The deal was good for few hours on that Friday evening.
Last year, around May, Expedia for a few hours: JFK-BKK $99 RT. Child's fare was posted, I believe, as available to adults.
Marathon Man
Jul 27, 04, 7:55 pm
I think it would help if you could give us the details of how your friend is getting these miles fraudulently. If you could just give us the step-by-step procedures along with some weblinks to make it easier for us (to understand), it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
yes, do give us the details. for this could be a great scheme for me to participate in and sort of make up for all the crap that the airlines and their shady partners pull on us.
Not in regular life, but in my miles life, I certainly think that I am more than entitled to scam them if they can scam me--and they DO scam us all... (And oh yes, there IS a difference)
;)MM
-has anyone ever been able to get a phone contact for MetaReward or Ebay Anything Points?
I rest my case.
Bouncer
Jul 27, 04, 10:57 pm
Query:
How is back to back ticketing fraud? What criminal statute covers it?
More to the point, what if I simply by back to back tickets on two different airlines? If that ISN'T fraud (And I wonder how it can be), then why would buying them on one airline be fraud?
Regards,
-Bouncer-
ps: I've never had reason to do this, but it seems odd that someone can claim this.
MileKing
Jul 28, 04, 1:03 pm
What if that SOMEONE was a company or series of companies involved in a deal instead of a person who was telling you about it?
I know many here have heard of it before, but for those who have not, consider the recently botched promo on double +25% miles from Points.com that come from the very badly managed AA/Ebay Anything Points/oints.com deal. (You can find the info on that deal in the AA forum and look toward the end posts of the 'Get "UNLIMITED" AA miles for less than $0.01 per mile'" thread at:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/showthread.php?t=312953&goto=newpost
Many companies have seemingly knowingly ripped off many people on this very board of several thousands of miles! They did not post for many people and these were fo the deals people actually stuck with and bought something from! They did not post in time for others, and for no apparant reason except that points.com admits to having had a technical glitch with their systems that send points to and fro. So why do WE have to pay for that and lose out?
I certainly agree. The miles/points landscape is littered with firms that have advertised miles/points for sign ups, purchase of something, etc., but then never actually delivered on the promises. Aside from the aforementioned Points.com/E-bay promo, which I decided not to participate in (too complex), I can recall the following:
GoldPoints/ValueMags fiasco (all GoldPoints fault in my view)
AT&T & MCI long distance sign-ups
MyReceivables.com (they offered 500 AA miles for leads for their business then claimed it was only for "qualified" leads and didn't deliver)
Office Max
MilesMall (They run hot & cold; one time I had to report them to BBB before I received my miles. Now I shop elsewhere.)
Sheraton Norwood (500 Starpoints for signing up to receive info on their meeting facilities....they reneged..details available on the Starwood forum)
I'm sure there are many others. My view now is to pursue what is owed, diligently, and stop doing business with the offending company if they don't deliver.
RCC
Jul 28, 04, 4:05 pm
I think it would help if you could give us the details of how your friend is getting these miles fraudulently. If you could just give us the step-by-step procedures along with some weblinks to make it easier for us (to understand), it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
I echo these thoughts :)
Marathon Man
Jul 28, 04, 5:25 pm
Query:
How is back to back ticketing fraud? What criminal statute covers it?
More to the point, what if I simply by back to back tickets on two different airlines? If that ISN'T fraud (And I wonder how it can be), then why would buying them on one airline be fraud?
Regards,
-Bouncer-
ps: I've never had reason to do this, but it seems odd that someone can claim this.
i dont know either-seeing as how you are paying them money anyway.
is it that you are finding a way to legally pay them LESS because of your creativity and they just dont like people who figure things out, or are there some real laws being broken?
We have to fly two airlines and cross the itins this coming winter. Will fly BOS to AMS on one, and before we use its return, we will be flying AMS to BOS and then back on another. So is that the same thing?
We also have to take busses and trains in there... do they care too (if they offer miles and are thus, partners?)