Desperate cricket fans may be out for a duck: Cricket Australia cancels scalped tickets
Cricket Australia cancels eBay tickets
What about scalping and the internet in general? Any thoughts? Feel free to go beyond the example presented within the transcripts.
Cricket Australia cancels eBay tickets
"The scalpers only became a problem once they started using internet auctions." Is this a reasonable statement or is Cricket Australia living in the past (120-odd years in the past, to be precise)? Should the end consumer suffer because Cricket Australia is trying to account for an ineffective ticketing system after the fact?From Desperate cricket fans may be out for a duck: Cricket Australia cancels scalped tickets
DANIEL FILER: Well, the important thing for Cricket Australia was to really spend time and effort making sure that genuine fans got tickets in the first place. And if you cast your mind back to when the Ashes tickets first went on sale, they really failed to do that. People were able to get large numbers of tickets, and I can't see how that helps the genuine fans. And we've seen when sporting bodies take that time and effort to make sure that genuine fans get the tickets in the first place, this effectively becomes a non-issue.
NORMAN HERMANT: Not surprisingly, Peter Young from Cricket Australia sees it differently.
PETER YOUNG: Our view is that if eBay refused to give scalpers advertising space, we wouldn't have a problem.
News Limited for example, Australia's largest newspaper publication, is refusing to take adverts from scalpers who are flogging tickets to the 3 Mobile Ashes Series. We pleaded with eBay to not give scalpers the space. We've been selling tickets the way we sell tickets for 120-odd years, without the slightest problem. The scalpers only became a problem once they started using internet auctions.
What about scalping and the internet in general? Any thoughts? Feel free to go beyond the example presented within the transcripts.