Ticketmaster argues that the access problems were the result of the submission of an “unprecedented” number of counterfeit tickets. At the end of the concert, the company said that it had contacted Profeco to clarify the facts and respond to the affected consumers.
The price range of the tickets for the Benito Antonio Martínez concert offered by Ticketmaster ranged between 600 and 8,450 pesos, but one day before the reggaeton singer started his first date in the Aztec State, there were those who sold the tickets for more of 30,000 dollars (about 600,000 pesos) on StubHub, a platform that connects sellers with buyers.
What can users do to prevent ticket cloning? Is it possible to sue Ticketmaster for fraud? Is it possible to regulate ticket sales on Ticketmaster?
We will address these issues this Monday at 6:00 pm in a Space from the Twitter of Expansion , where Luis Fernando Flores Chávez, director of the Tec de Monterrey Law degree, Toluca campus; Jorge Bravo, CEO of Digital Policy & Law Group, and Ángel Méndez, academic at the Commercial Banking School.
You can connect from your Twitter account.