14 Mar 2008, 14:29 | #1 |
Office manager
Join Date: 25.04.2002
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Ticket Tout discussion (from e bay thread)
At least there are (still) no Meat Loaf tickets on Ebay. Which probably means the touts couldnt get their hands on the good seats either. Wasnt it within one hour that .net tickets appeared on there during the ticket sale of the 2007 tours?
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14 Mar 2008, 15:13 | #2 | |
Armed ba$tard and Jo's other half.
Join Date: 06.08.2002
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Quote:
Spoke a bit too soon there Ankie Although this dude must be smoking some real good stuff to be asking these prices per pair for row W So optimistic it beggars belief |
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14 Mar 2008, 15:26 | #3 | |
Promoted to Wario's spellchecker
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Quote:
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/2-tickets-meat...em260220339661 Ain't right is it? |
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14 Mar 2008, 15:57 | #4 |
Mega Loafer
Join Date: 16.09.2007
Location: Herefordshire, England
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I gather Ebay is heaving with tix now. Painful itching diseases to all touts!!!
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14 Mar 2008, 16:40 | #6 |
Promoted to Wario's spellchecker
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What gets me is that Ebay argue that they're providing a service that the ticket companies aren't as in if you can't go to the concert for whatever reason you can sell the tickets instead of losing out when ticketmaster etc won't give you a refund.
This is so obviously touting though when the tix are listed the day they go on sale, THIS should be banned. I've sold Meat tix on ebay (RAH for one) but I stopped the auction when they reached face value/what I paid for them, that's what the rule should be, sale not to go over face value plus costs. Can't see it happening though, Ebay would lose so much money in fees and Paypal charges. |
14 Mar 2008, 16:50 | #7 |
Office manager
Join Date: 25.04.2002
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Only way to stop this, is if there is a law against it, I am afraid......
Fans are angry, artists become aware of it, but nothing is done. |
15 Mar 2008, 12:25 | #8 |
Armed ba$tard and Jo's other half.
Join Date: 06.08.2002
Location: In the middle of nowhere near the end of the line.
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I can't see any end to ticket touting.
The convieniant loophole is the "booking fee". As there is no legal limit to how much a company is allowed to charge as a booking fee, it's perfectly ok to set up a company and start trading. Whatever e bay says about the morality of it's attitude concerning touting is BALDERDASH (haven't used that word for ages ). If e bay believes that ticket touting is wrong, and they are only supplying a service for people who have found they cannot attend an event they have tickets for, why does a link to e bay come up in search results when you look for "ticket touting? Ticket touting will continue as long as there is a market, and there will always be a market. It's fine to be adamant that you would not go through a ticket tout because it's against your ethics, but for everyone who won't, there are 100 who will. The result being that you don't get to go to the concert, someone else does, the ticket tout still gets their money, and the one losing out the most is you. Something really should be done to prevent these parasites operating. If e bay was trully serious that they wanted merely to provide a service for people who needed to dump tickets they can't use, it would be easy for them to rule that tickets could only be sold on buy it now auctions that can't exceed the face value. But with the problem being so wide spred, almost institutionalised, and there being such little done by the authorities, i'm afraid we won't see the back of ticket touts for some time |
17 Mar 2008, 11:20 | #9 |
Nutty Tart From Hell
Join Date: 25.05.2007
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It should be stopped,but it wont because of one word-GREED
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