Ernest
Stupid IDIOT
The bigger scandal was how did Man U get our tickets for the 1983 FA Cup Final
I hope these remaining companies fold pronto, so I'll have a chance of getting some tickets this time round for the baseball. Because last year it was a complete write-off thanks directly to them and their like.
What I’ve never understood is that if these sites can sell tickets at such high prices because there is the demand and the willingness to pay then why don’t the promoters charge the higher price in the first place?
My own limited experience suggests gig prices have gone up a fair bit over the last couple of years, and I assumed that this was in reaction to the secondary market (as well as the shift to artists earning more from touring than record sales (streaming) these days).
The secondary market does serve a useful function. It should be possible to sell on a ticket that can no longer be used, and those who missed out on a first wave of ticket sales should be able to buy such tickets, but putting a price ceiling of face value on the sale of any ticket would immediately end the touting market.
I have no issues with profit-making firms, such as StubHub, facilitating such a marketplace for secondary sales and charging a reasonable administration fee for each transaction.
Not necessarily. Scarlet mist has been doing it well for yonks, presumably making modest advertising revenues rather than unacceptably high ‘supply led’ pricing - which is bollocks.
Tickets for Rage Against the Machine in Vancouver went on sale today at $170 + taxes and fees, they're already being re-sold for just shy of $1,000 on re-sale sites.
You're absolute scum if you re-sell a ticket for profit.
Who on NSC as season ticket holder can honestly say if they were offered £1000 for their ticket against Liverpool they`d turn it down.
Try me.
Tickets for Rage Against the Machine in Vancouver went on sale today at $170 + taxes and fees, they're already being re-sold for just shy of $1,000 on re-sale sites.
You're absolute scum if you re-sell a ticket for profit.
Who on NSC as season ticket holder can honestly say if they were offered £1000 for their ticket against Liverpool they`d turn it down. obviously I would !!
I`d guess in a stadium of 30,000 at least 25,000 would take the money. am I wrong?
The likes of Stubhub and Viagogo have sophisticated online "bots" to hoover up all the tickets online before anyone else has even had an opportunity to buy them through legit channels, at a stroke removing the availability. They quite literally HARVEST them from the get-go, then sell them on at monstrously inflated prices. Because they're then in possession, and because they can. No consequences..
Hang on a minute - where are you getting that from?
My understanding is these two platforms permit others to sell on tickets at vastly inflated prices, where demand exists. StubHub and Viagogo don't buy and sell tickets themselves, they profit due to the element they charge for each completed transaction.
I'm minded to delete your post, as it's actionable, unless you can back it up very quickly.
Peter Hunter and David Smith, trading as Ticket Wiz and BZZ, used multiple identifies and bots to buy £4m worth of tickets to events including gigs by Ed Sheeran and Taylor Swift as well as West End shows such as Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. The pair sold them on secondary ticketing websites for £10.8m, jurors at Leeds crown court were told.
During the three-month trial, prosecutors described the married pair as “dishonest fraudsters motivated by greed”. They were found guilty of fraudulent trading and possessing an article for fraud on Thursday.
The verdict comes after the Guardian exposed Hunter as one of the most powerful ticket touts in the UK, as part of an investigation into secondary ticketing.
Two of the sites, GetMeIn and Seatwave, have since been closed down. The two largest players, StubHub and Viagogo, are still trading despite multiple complaints from consumers, the condemnation of MPs and an abortive lawsuit against Viagogo from the consumer regulator.
The Guardian:
Delete by all means, but I took that as meaning Stubhub and Viagogo use similar methods. Dunno how else they'd hoover up such vast numbers of tickets.
I don’t think there’s any evidence to show they use these methods themselves, but they certainly have facilitated touts who do, and have challenged legislation to outlaw the use of bots etc.