Well, I tried to buy Seattle tickets Monday morning. Not knowing when it would start, I had a window open from 7:30 local when I got to work. The Ticketmaster link kept saying it didn't start until 3/12, and I checked back from Sarah's site several times, with no change, even after 10:00. Finally, about 10:15 I posted a chat to Ellie to see if anyone had better info. She replied back in a few minutes, but I didn't see it until lunch (11:00). Her link worked, but only a few seats were shown as available, 30 or more rows back. I finally got the site to let me pick one, and then began a lengthy process trying to get it to accept my credit card. Finally, after consistently refusing to accept my 3-digit verification number (which I had used on Amazon the day before, so I knew was good), it timed out. At that point it showed no seats available. Not having seen this before, I assumed the whole show was sold out. The next day (6/21) showed the same. So I concluded there was some hacking going on of some type. I suppose the bots could be considered in that regard. It certainly explains a lot. It's a rigged game, like the stock market, apparently. So I'll try again at 10:00 AM Saturday morning and see if anything is left.
I like the idea of a one-time code being issued to each person who applies by email, with no publicly available codes. Broadcasting it on FB was a bad idea. Maybe a question could be asked, that fans would know, or know how to answer. Make a multi-step process, to help deter scalpers as well. Anyone bothering to go to the trouble to monitor her site for announcements is likely a fairly serious fan. Scalpers probably wouldn't be likely to fool around with if it takes extra steps. They could find an easier venue to hack. I'm wondering if others got the bad links like I did. Was that hacking or just bad links?
I hope you're right, Karine, and I can find a seat Saturday. Either show is fine with me, as long as I make one of them!
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_e_smile.gif)
Like you, I'll be damned if I will buy a ticket at an inflated price. It's either face value or nothing, for me.