• @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    Season ticket holders resell their tickets all the time for stuff like hockey games they can’t make it too. As you said it’s paper, there isn’t anything stopping them from copying and selling it or emailing multiple people.

    This is why reselling places exist, it creates a history for the seller so you know you aren’t getting scammed.

    There is still valid reasons to resell tickets, most are non-returnable, so if the person can’t go anymore, why shouldn’t they try and recoup the cost? Sure “scalping” is gone, but not reselling tickets.

    Scalping is usually used to refer to the specific act of reselling for profit, what definition are you using here?

    • @[email protected]
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      27 months ago

      Every sporting event I’ve been to in the past few years is exclusively digital tickets. Even the local amateur women’s soccer team.

    • lemmyvore
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      17 months ago

      I’m using scalping with the obvious definition of gouging profit.

      I’m saying scalping is enabled by making tickets hard to counterfeit. You can’t criminalize the act of reselling itself but you can deter it by making it inherently untrustworthy. Reselling should be possible, but it needs to stop short of getting out of hand.

      When you create a trustworthy ticket resell market you’re basically creating a hotbed of scalping. If people can reliably find clients for ever-increasing ticket prices, then ticket prices will keep going up. That’s exactly what Ticket Nation & friends have done, and they profit by taking a fat percentage.