- Elton John, Madonna tickets on sale this weekend
- NY Knicks struggle to sell expensive tickets
- Ticket resellers spar with country singer Eric Church
- Big names hit the road for big tours in '12
- "Carrie" revival is Broadway's latest movie-to-musical production
- NFL offering tickets to the annual scouting combine?
- Cloud-based Vendini continues to develop mobile market
- Ticketmaster melt-down frustrates Bruce Springsteen fans
- St. Louis Rams resume ticket sales for London game
- Broadway's sales continue to fall in the first week of February
StubHub and the New England Patriots continue to wrangle over ticket resales
The legal maneuvering continues in the three-year-old lawsuit by the New England Patriots against StubHub, as the secondary ticketing company was reportedly dealt a blow recently to one of its arguments.
StubHub unsuccessfully tried to argue that it should not be held responsible for the actions of its users under Section 230 of the landmark Communications Decency Act. The company was seeking a partial summary judgment that would have gone a long way to thwarting the Patriots' efforts to paint the secondary ticket company as partly liable for users buying and selling the teams' tickets. StubHub claims it does not sell tickets itself, the company simply created a forum for others to buy or sell tickets.

The former Super Bowl Champions sued the secondary ticketing giant for facilitating the resale of Patriots tickets on the StubHub Web site, which the team has said it prohibits. The team claims its season ticket holder policy, and Massachusetts' anti-scalping laws, do not allow for the resale of tickets. Some Massachusetts legislators have sought to have the state law repealed, which limits resold ticket prices to $2 above face value, but the proposed bill remains in limbo.
Last summer, StubHub announced it had exhausted its appeals and was complying with a court ruling requiring it to turn over thousands of names of brokers and individuals who were buying or selling Patriots tickets. However, the Patriots have not disclosed what it intends to do with those names.
The Patriots's Boston, MA-based attorney, Daniel Goldberg of Bingham McCutchen LLP did not respond to questions about the case. StubHub declined to comment on the case, stating that it was in the discovery phase and still pending.
According to attorney and legal scholar David Ardia of the Citizen Media Law Project, the court dismissed the Section 230 immunity argument because it does not think it applies to "interactive computer service providers," such as StubHub, that may have materially contributed to alleged illegal conduct. In this case, the Massachusetts anti-scalping law.
StubHub has also said it should be treated the same as newspaper want-ads, but the court also rejected that argument because want-ads charge fixed advertising rates, not based on sales, nor do they help to sell items for increased costs, according to Ardia. StubHub does not require users to set ticket prices above face value, nor did the court allegedly offer evidence that StubHub materially contributed to wrongful acts.
"This is a troubling interpretation for Section 230, and has broad implications for online platforms and social networking sites – not just ticket exchanges," Braden Cox, research and policy counsel for Internet advocacy group NetChoice, told TicketNews. Cox will be among the panelists discussing legal issues this July at Ticket Summit Las Vegas, the ticket industry trade show and conference hosted by TicketNews's parent company TicketNetwork.
"The court is sending a message that online sites should be the enforcer of private contracts to which they are not a party. This is an added obligation and potential liability that threatens the stated intend of Section 230, 'to promote the continued development of the Internet and other interactive computer services and other interactive media'," he added.



Subscribe to this feed
Comments
All comments are subject to TicketNews' community rules.Post new comment +
Look folks. Kraft went up on the price of tickets 30% last year without explanation. So, since 5% of the Pats fans were willing to pay $400 for a pair in the lower level in the secondary market, Kraft decided to charge EVERYONE stubhub prices. Think about it!! If I was to buy a pair to a game against the Atlanta Falcons, prices through Tickemaster will be $169 each, plus TicketMaster fees, which should bring the total to around $390!! If I wait til the week of the game, I could get those same tickets from a scalper for around $250. Once the price reaches saturation point, fans can buy tickets for under cost. Just asked the Rolling Stones ($500 face), (Madonna $375 face)and all those artists who perform for its FANS. No wonder they say they are sold out, but I can get the best tickets for months before the show. Kraft should worry about a backlash from the season ticket holders.
Hey Scalped, what do you work for stubhub or something? Your telling me that its cheaper to buy tickets at a 300% markup than buying them direct from a broker at face value? You are delusional. Your argument is bogus and u know it. If these guys got caught doing what they are doing on a street corner they would be arrested on the spot. Its price gouging and it clearly violates the user agreement to sell the tickets above face value. Im sure a few thousand blood sucking leaches (your probably one of them) that make all kinds of money buying and selling tickets are all up in arms over this. I'l tell you right now that there are 10's of thousands, maybe even 100's of thousands of REAL sports fans that would love to see someone put a stop to this. One day the hammer is gonna come down on these guys, and I can not WAIT until that day.
"The court is sending a message that online sites should be the enforcer of private contracts to which they are not a party" - This statement is simply untrue in this case as Stubhub is a party to the transaction as they DIRECTLY benefit from a transaction.
StubHub operates no differently than does, for example, TicketsNow or TicketLiquidator.
It, StubHub is the seller of record; it processes the buyers' orders, it processes the buyers' credit/debit cards, it buys the tickets ordered from the party who listed them, it creates the FedEx waybill used to ship such tickets, that waybill names StubHub as the shipper, it handles all communications with the buyers, and the listing party has no contact with the buyers.
StubHub is not a site that simply & merely facilitates "social interaction;" it is, in every sense of the word, a broker.