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Why would a theme park do this? Does the government supply a terrorist-fingerprint database?

I would understand if a private company does ID and (maybe) fingerprint checking for visitors of their research facilities. I had this a few times, although most of the time they maybe write down your name and address and thats it. The only facility that took it really serious was the ESA tech-center in Noordwijk (not to be confused with the little theme park they have near by). They needed passport-numbers beforehand, those passport scanning keyboards they have at airports, the software on the pc also looked similar and guards openly carrying big guns (you seldom see that in Europe). But well, its a space research complex there is probably a ton of military secrets around.

But at the admission for a F'kin theme-park... Why?



They do it to curb sharing of multi-day tickets, which is prohibited by their terms & conditions. It's a relatively quick way to check that the person who first used the ticket is the same person who returned with it, rather than someone they sold/rented it to. Selling or "renting" multi-day passes for some fraction of their days is a common way to make money in the areas around theme parks (and a common way for people to try to save money getting in). I don't think this is all that sinister.

I personally would rather have thumbprint scans than have to wait as each guest's photo ID is checked every time they enter.


i'm surprised they even bother with fingerprints...face recognition cant be that far off




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