Australian Court Says Putting Event Tickets On eBay Is Perfectly Legal
from the you-bought-it,-you-own-it dept
We've been noting recently way too many attempts by people or companies to retain control of their products after they've been sold. The fact that it's been allowed with digital products continues to spread into other products as well. Down in Australia, it seems the court has put a stop to one such plan, telling the organizers of a big concert series that they can not ban the sale of tickets on eBay as they had tried to do. In fact, the court ordered them to pay eBay's legal fees. It's not clear, of course, why eBay was even involved here, as it would seem like the type of dispute that would be directly between the ticketsellers and the concert organizers -- however, it looks like eBay just wanted to make it clear that it was okay to sell tickets on the site. Of course, the concert organizers could have just taken a page from other event organizers by claiming that eBay was "profiteering on the backs of the impoverished" in order to make people feel guilty enough to stop.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Only matters in America
Thanks to American cry babies, this mentality has spread across the world.
Please do us all a favor here in the states, show that we don't actually have that much influence through our crappy game of Football and all the losers that come associated with it. Please show us you ARE better than that. Thanks.
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Re: Only matters in America
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Re: Only matters in America
I mean, what kind of morons are we Americans when we openly riot in the streets when team X loses...
Oh, wait, that's the other football. Across the pond.
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Explain that to me? The fans are so stupid and childish that they have to tear apart whole city blocks because their team won?
Gee, you must be right. Our football is much more civil. At least the people across the pond USE THEIR FEET...
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Free market...
either way you shouldn't care, you got paid the price you were expecting for your tickets...
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Good timing
If someone is willing to pay double, triple the selling price for a sold out festival, who am I to deny them?
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Here's another example...
http://tinyurl.com/ybu2bd
While I don't like the idea of ticket scalpers, the idea that they can control something after it has been sold is asinine.
If they really want to do something about this problem, perhaps they should start offering refunds on tickets...
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My Bad, Sorry!
I'm a moron and so is DittoBox. Sorry for the confusion!
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This is not a good decision
It's not as if reselling makes tickets cheaper, performers more money or helps the underprivileged get access to events they otherwise wouldn't. It creates artificial scarcity, raises prices, locks out poorer fans, encourages fraud and puts money into the pockets of people who deserve it the least.
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No so clean cut...
EBAY refused to withdraw tickets when asked to by the promoter.
This case is all about the change from 'MAY' to 'WILL'.
If you buy a ticket from EBAY to the Big Day Out it 'may' be canceled at the gate. My feeling is, that after/because of this ruling, it is going to be 100% of tickets re-sold on EBAY will be canceled.
As it was bought with the scalpers details (CC) the refund goes to the scalper, not the ticket holder.
So I would be VERY wary of buying a BDO ticket from EBAY.
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