Lodi News-Sentinel

Ticketmast­er schemes with scalpers so you pay more, report says

- By Ethan Baron

Scalpers using bots to scoop up huge numbers of tickets to resell at much-inflated prices have become a curse for the concert-going public. Shows can sell out in moments, with thousands of tickets appearing on reseller websites minutes later.

So what is Ticketmast­er, the largest player in the ticketing industry, doing about a problem afflicting its customers with added costs and hassles? Cashing in — twice. That’s according to a new report based on a news-media sting operation at a ticketing and live-entertainm­ent convention in Las Vegas, where Ticketmast­er reportedly held a private event for scalpers, whom the company refers to as “resellers” and “brokers.”

Canada’s national broadcaste­r CBC and the Toronto Star sent undercover reporters to Ticket Summit 2018 in July, CBC reported Wednesday.

“Posing as scalpers and equipped with hidden cameras, the journalist­s were pitched on Ticketmast­er’s profession­al reseller program,” CBC said. “Company representa­tives told them Ticketmast­er’s resale division turns a blind eye to scalpers who use ticket-buying bots and fake identities to snatch up tickets and then resell them on the site for inflated prices.

"Those pricey resale tickets include extra fees for Ticketmast­er.”

The company told the news outlets that as long as there’s an imbalance between supply and demand for event tickets, there will be a secondary ticket market.

“It is our job to offer a marketplac­e that provides a safe and fair place for fans to shop, buy and sell tickets in both the primary and secondary markets,” Ticketmast­er said.

At the convention, a Ticketmast­er “resale director” held a session closed to the media, CBC reported. “The audience heard that Ticketmast­er has developed a profession­al reseller program and within the past year launched TradeDesk, a webbased inventory-management system for scalpers,” CBC reported. “TradeDesk allows scalpers to upload large quantities of tickets purchased from Ticketmast­er’s site and quickly list them again for resale. With the click of a button, scalpers can hike or drop prices on reams of tickets on Ticketmast­er’s site based on their assessment of fan demand.”

The resale program and TradeDesk appear closely guarded by Ticketmast­er. “Neither TradeDesk nor the profession­al reseller program are mentioned anywhere on Ticketmast­er’s website or in its corporate reports,” CBC reported. “To access the company’s TradeDesk website, a person must first send in a registrati­on request.”

A Ticketmast­er sales representa­tive told a reporter that although the firm has a “buyer abuse” department that keeps an eye out for suspicious online activity, the reselling department doesn’t police users of TradeDesk, CBC reported.

Another Ticketmast­er employee at the convention was asked whether the company would ban scalpers who violated the firm’s terms of service by getting around ticket-buying limits. The employee said Ticketmast­er had spent millions on TradeDesk.

“The last thing we’d want to do is get brokers caught up to where they can’t sell inventory with us,” he said, CBC reported.

By 2015, the reselling of tickets had grown into a $5 billion industry in the United States, CNBC reported. For Ticketmast­er, this market is “particular­ly lucrative,” CBC reported.

“For example, if Ticketmast­er collects $25.75 on a $209.50 ticket on the initial sale, when the owner posts it for resale for $400 on the site, the company stands to collect an additional $76 on the same ticket,” according to CBC.

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