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by bogomipz
2668 days ago
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>"Not to mention almost all US based carriers and many others use ITA's flight search service to power their own (the carriers') websites. They can't search in the data they created, so they have to pay ITA." Can you say why aren't carriers able to search in the data they created without using ITA? |
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You have to realize the difference between a "pricing search" and a "low fare search", to use ITA terminology.
A "pricing search" knows which specific flights it goes through and you just find the fares (keep in mind the carriers file like 600 fares for planes with 20 seats). The airlines could always do that. Before ITA came along in 2001 or so that is what you were waiting on in the travel agency while the agent tries different flight combinations by hand.
"Low fare search" is also finding the flights. The carriers could not generally do that without ITA. There are exceptions such as Southwest which had a fare structure more like buses that kept the combinatorics down.
But in addition to the immense amounts of fare and rule data that pile on your if you search 400 itineraries out * 400 back you also have the seat availability system. No carrier had (probably has) a system that can answer the amount of "seat" queries that a single low fare search causes.
Keep in mind "seat availability data" has nothing to do with what seats are available. It is a high-frequency (10 Hz or whereabouts) way to turn fares on and off.