|
|
|
|
|
by alexasmyths
3206 days ago
|
|
"The only difference between this and any other marketing campaign is that you just happened to catch them this time." I'm not sure this is fair. By displaying false information, they are point-blank lying. That's misinformation. It should be illegal - it could be. Some other tricks such as 'creating very expensive items which they never expect to sell' as a cognitive 'price anchor' - well, not quite the same thing. I suggest there is a distinction between falsehoods and other forms of tricks. In the end it probably doesn't matter, but I wouldn't mind one bit if there was some consumer protections concerning this. |
|
As a devil's advocate, despite the presentation being scummy, there's definite consumer value to seeing tickets that sold. It helps correct an information imbalance between sellers and buyers. If all you saw were available tickets, you'd have no way of knowing whether they were being priced above market or not. By showing you two sales, provided they're actually real sales and picked arbitrarily (i.e. not picking the most expensive sales), they're giving you information about what other buyers are willing to pay for tickets. It's like seeing real estate comps...sure the houses have already been sold, but it helps you get a feel for whether the one you're looking at is being sold for a fair price.