The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Ticketmast­er fined $10 million for invading rival’s computers

- REUTERS

NEW YORK — Ticketmast­er LLC will pay a US$10 million criminal fine to avoid prosecutio­n on U.S. charges it repeatedly accessed the computer systems of a rival whose assets its parent Live Nation Entertainm­ent Inc. later purchased.

The fine is part of a threeyear deferred prosecutio­n agreement between Ticketmast­er and the U.S. Department of Justice, which was disclosed at a hearing before U.S. District Judge Margo Brodie in Brooklyn federal court last week.

Ticketmast­er’s agreement resolves five criminal counts including wire fraud, conspiracy and computer intrusion.

It also requires the Beverly Hills, Calif.-based company to maintain compliance and ethics procedures designed to detect and prevent computer-related theft.

Ticketmast­er primarily sells and distribute­s tickets to concerts and other events.

Prosecutor­s said that from August 2013 to December 2015, Ticketmast­er employees used stolen passwords to repeatedly access computers belonging to its rival to obtain confidenti­al business in-formation.

The rival, Songkick, specialize­d in artist presales, in which some tickets — often around eight per cent — are set aside for fans before general ticket sales begin, in part to foil scalpers.

Prosecutor­s said Ticketmast­er was hoping to “choke off” the company and lure major clients away, and that one employee in the scheme was rewarded with a promotion and a raise.

Zeeshan Zaidi, a U.S.-Canadian citizen with degrees from Harvard Law School and Harvard Business school who once led Ticketmast­er’s Artist Services division, pleaded guilty to a related charge in October 2019. He has yet to be sentenced.

Ticketmast­er fired Zaidi and the other employee in October 2017. “Their actions violated our corporate policies and were inconsiste­nt with our values,” it said in a statement on Wednesday. “We are pleased that this matter is now resolved.”

In January 2018, Live Nation reached a US$110million settlement with Songkick to resolve an anti-trust lawsuit Songkick had filed, and agreed to buy Songkick’s remaining technology assets and pa-tent portfolio.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Ticketmast­er has agreed to pay a $10-million fine to resolve criminal charges against the company, including wire fraud, conspiracy and computer intrusion.
REUTERS Ticketmast­er has agreed to pay a $10-million fine to resolve criminal charges against the company, including wire fraud, conspiracy and computer intrusion.

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