Imagine, after a show is sold out, the ticket seller creates a waiting list. As long as the waiting list is longer than 0, anyone who purchased a ticket and no longer wants it can get a full refund.
Now you have tickets which are not transferrable but without removing the ability for people to access the event.
Do we tie it to your ticketing account? Ok fine, the scalpers just sell whole accounts.
Do we tie it to your phone? If so, scalpers get a really cheap Android to send the e-tix to. That’ll cut out the flippers on the less hot tours, but probably just make Taylor Swiftc resales more expensive. And what about people who get a new phone between ticket purchase time and the show (a lag of often several months).
Also you now just helped the scalpers every time they misfire. No more eating 30% on stubhub and selling below market!
It’s not a bad idea but it’s not as trivial as it sounds.
I personally think a better idea is to just break up live nation. This is a problem that could easily be solved if the venue owner, promoter, and ticket agent aren’t all one company.
Some venues mandate facial recognition to get in [1]. I am not supportive of such corporate surveillance, but to rebut your comment, identity solutions exist to dissuade scalping, and some are in active use today. Even if you break up Live Nation, scalping will occur for events if profit is to be made.
[1] https://www.marketplace.org/2024/10/23/facial-recognition-th...
That’s the sort of thing that only happens after a settlement with the government. Which, in the case of LN, is 100% what needs to happen.
The corporate surveillance angle is also important, but IME 0% of these companies bother to explain that the thing they advertised when they took your money isn't the thing you actually have access to.