Unfair, unethical World Series ticket sales

I have a huge issue with how tickets were sold here on Monday/Tuesday to the World Series games in Denver. My biggest issue is with the lying, unfair company behind the online ticket sales, Paciolan Inc.

Here’s a run-down of all the issues and what I suspect really happened:

  • No tickets were sold in-person: They said putting them all online would be more fair to the public. Wrong! It would’ve been more fair to put some tickets at Coors Field because Denver locals would be guaranteed fairly-priced tickets. Instead, people without internet access had to go to the local library (they still took the day off!). Someone (probably at Paciolan) convinced the Rockies to sell all their tickets online. You know, because people at work couldn’t go down and wait in line.
  • Delayed their press conference over an hour: Rockies officials said they’d talk about what would happen to ticket sales at 5:00pm yesterday. Nobody showed up until around 6:30pm. Unprofessional. Two problems, 1) it doesn’t take 5 hours to fix a server issue unless your code or architecture are severely unscalable, 2) you don’t leave millions of people hanging around waiting unless you really don’t have a good answer. They didn’t.
  • They were taken down by a DDoS attack: I think this is a downright lie. Paciolan says the Rockies ticket sales had nothing to do with their servers suddenly crawling to a halt on Monday. Thus, causing ticket sales to be suspended until noon the next day. No, this was not an attack, it was a lot of people trying to buy a ticket all at once. How do I know? They said they had backup plans ready for Tuesday. Yet… the servers crawled to a halt again. That’s how the internet works! No way was there an attack that couldn’t have been prevented (by a competent service provider).
  • Monday had many evenue web servers, Tuesday had one: On Monday we were directed to ev15.evenue.net… along with ev8, ev14 and a slew of other subdomains. On Tuesday I only saw ev3. My suspicion: they blocked certain users and sent them to a default error page that only refreshed with no intention of allowing a ticket purchase. I tried connecting to all the other evenue.net servers today with no luck. They obviously exist though, go search on Google. I have a strong suspicion because….
  • IP-blocking was occurring: Paciolan outright said they had blocked ‘suspicious’ IP addresses (you know, because of all that attacking going on). No way! By saying that we know they blocked people, but not specifically who or what. They could go straight to the firewall and deny multiple connections from the same IP-address and send them off to some phony page (like, the ev3 server). So, then Company A has 50 employees and they all try to connect at once. Paciolan then denies all of them sending them to ev3 and an eternity of refreshing. No intention of ever selling tickets to these people. Oops, what happened to the fairness of people buying tickets at work? Rumor has it they were also trying to blocking IPs that weren’t “local.”
  • Lying about refreshing a page: Paciolan put up a message on Tuesday saying that manually refreshing the page will put you at the ‘end of the line’. Despite the obvious fact their own page was a simple countdown that then, you guessed it, refreshed the page. Just another way to manipulate people and try to keep them from taking down their servers (again).

Long story short: Paciolan gets hit hard on Monday. Blocks a lot of people from buying tickets Tuesday. Lies to users and tells them not to refresh their pages. All because they don’t want to look like idiots that couldn’t handle World Series sales (or DDoS attacks for that matter).

If I were the Colorado Rockies (or any client of theirs for that matter) I would drop this company real quick for the shady, unprofessional job they did this week.

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About Devin Reams

My name is Devin Reams and I founded this site to provide a useful news and review resource for Colorado skiers and snowboarders (and mountain enthusiasts). I've been skiing since I was a little kid (we moved out here when I was five years old) and I plan to ski for years beyond that. Although cosnow is not my full-time job it is my full-time winter hobby. I've been an "Epic Local" passholder since 2006 (when it was called a "Colorado Pass" or "Five Mountain Pass"). My favorite resorts are Beaver Creek and Breckenridge.

7 thoughts on “Unfair, unethical World Series ticket sales

  1. Ben Bleikamp

    I heard about this plan to sell tickets online via ESPN. I live in Columbus, OH and I thought “Hey I should buy a ticket…and sell it on eBay.” Democratic for the country? Yes. For true fans, no?

    Definitely ridiculous that they did it this way.

    Reply
  2. Josh

    That is really shitty. I’ve never had problems buying, or even attempting to buy, World Series tickets. I think your guesses are correct. If they really were prepared, the site would have been slow, not completely shut down. Same thing for Tuesday, if you are only accessing one server, they were up to something.

    Reply
  3. Nicole

    I definitely think the tickets should have been sold through a couple different venues, perhaps with a lottery system similar to the one the Red Sox implemented. I attempted to buy tickets on a lark thinking even if I decided not to go, a co-worker or friend would want them. I, too, got to stare at ev3 until sometime after two when the Rockies website told me they were sold out (mind you the ticket website didn’t time out and let me know this). Unfortunately, no one I know managed to get tickets either.

    And the DDoS excuse? Anyone even semi-knowledgeable about servers/websites knows they just didn’t have the bandwidth or the server capacity to handle the demand.

    Reply
  4. Devin

    @Josh: I agree, this company was not prepared and the Rockies wanted to try something different. Why re-invent the wheel? Just sell the tickets with a lottery system.. give people a unique login number so nobody floods the server with requests.

    @Nicole: Absolutely, I don’t think anyone has ever said “yeah, they’ll all be online, good luck!” This is just a small shop selling tickets and they’ve had problems before. This time they got caught in the spotlight, though.

    Reply
  5. d

    i couldn’t agree with this more. the stupid chicago cubs have made these mistakes, albeit not as horribly handled as what you’re describing. cubs fans spend hours waiting online for playoff tickets (obviously i’m not talking about this year) and the ticket brokers and scalpers always seem to end up with hundreds. when will baseball realize that online sales are an invitation for exploitation and upset fans?

    Reply
  6. Devin

    Exactly! I’d love to have a lottery… easy as that. I either got my number or I didn’t. You eliminate: the ‘attacked website’ nonsense, not one but two afternoons wasted hitting refresh, the stress of not knowing whether or not you’ll get tickets, etc.

    Oh well!

    Reply

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