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Trump, Kid Rock launch all government BOTS Act Enforcement
Chris Castle looks at how President Trump is taking on ticket scalpers with a new executive order that calls for all government BOTS Act enforcement. Could this finally stop bots from snatching up concert tickets and driving up prices?
Also: Music Industry reacts to Executive Order on Ticket Scalping
Trump, Kid Rock launch all government BOTS Act Enforcement
by CHRIS CASTLE via Music Tech Policy
Yes, the sound you hear echoing from Silicon Valley is the sound of gnashing teeth and rending garments—some freaking guitar player did an end run around Big Tech’s brutal lobbying power and got to the President of the United States. Don’t you just hate it when that happens? Maybe not, but trust me, they really hate itbecause in those dark hours they don’t talk about at parties, they really hate us and think we are beneath them. Remember that when you deal with YouTube and Spotify.
But to no avail. President Trump signed an executive order yesterday that can only be described as taking a whole of government approach to enforcement of the BOTS Act. As MTP readers will recall, I have long said when it comes to StubHub, SeatGeek and their ilk, no bots, no billionaires. It is hard to imagine a world where StubHub & Co. are not basing their entire business model on the use of bots and other automated processes to snarf up tickets before the fans can get them. This was also the subject of our ticketing panel at the 2024 Artist Rights Symposium in Washington, DC.
Remember, the BOTS Act, sponsored by Senator Marsha Blackburn and signed into law by President Obama in 2016, was designed to curb the use of automated software (bots) that purchase large quantities of event tickets, often within seconds of their release, to resell them at inflated prices through market makers like StubHub. It was so under-enforced that until the Executive Order it was entirely possible that StubHub could have sneaked out an IPO to slurp up money from the pubic trough before anyone knows better.
The government’s enforcement of the BOTS Act is so poor that Senator Blackburn found it necessary to introduce even more legislation to try to get the FTC to do their job. The Mitigating Automated Internet Networks for (MAIN) Event Ticketing Act is a bill introduced in 2023 by Senators Blackburn and Ben Ray Luján that aims to give the FTC even fewer excuses not to enforce the BOTS Act. It would further the FTC’s consumer protection mission against IPO-driven ticket scalping.
There are entire business lines built around furthering illegal ticket scalping that are so blatant they actually hold trade shows. For example, NITO complained to the FTC that their investigators found multiple software platforms on the trade show floor at a ticket brokers conference that are illegal under the BOTS Act and possibly under other laws such as Treasury Department regulations, financial crimes, wire fraud and the like.
As is mentioned in the Executive Order, the sad truth is that the FTC didn’t take its first action to enforce the 2016 law until 2021. And that’s the only action it has ever taken. Which is why President Trump’s executive order is so critical in stopping these scoundrels.
Kid Rock apparently had a chance to present these issues to President Trump and was present at the signing ceremony for the Executive Order. He said:
Yes, folks, we may be onto something here.
The reason I say that the EO establishes a “whole of government” approach is because of what else is in the order. The actual EO was published, and the press release on the White House site says this:
In other words, the EO directs other Executive Branch agencies at the DOJ, FTC, Treasury to take enforcement seriously. If the Department of Justice is involved, that could very well lead to enforcement of the BOTS Act’s criminal penalties. And it’s kind of hard to have a StubHub IPO from prison although President Trump may want to add the Securities and Exchange Commission to the list of agencies he is calling into action.
In addition to fines, individuals convicted under the BOTS Act could face imprisonment for up to 1 year for a first offense. Repeat offenders may face longer prison sentences, depending on the nature of the violation and if there are aggravating factors involved (such as fraud or large-scale operations). And remember, wire fraud is a common RICO predicate under the racketeering laws which is where I personally think this whole situation needs to go and go quickly. Remember, StubHub narrowly escaped a claim for civil RICO already.
So we shall see who is serious and who isn’t. But I will say I’m hopeful. If you wanted to seriously go after actually solving the problem on the law enforcement side, this is how you would do it.
If you wanted to go after it on the property rights side, Kid Rock’s line about establishing a cap is how you would start. The guy has clearly thought this through and we’re lucky that he has. We’ll get around to speculative ticketing and taking out some of the other trash down the road if that’s even a problem after getting after bots. But on property rights, let’s start with respecting the artist’s rights to set their own prices and have them followed instead of the current catastrophe.
The other take away from this is that Marsha was right—BOTS Act is probably enough law to handle the problem. You just need to enforce it.
I always say you can’t get Silicon Valley to behave with fines alone because they print money due to the income transfer. Prison, though, prison is the key that picks the lock.
MORE: Music Industry reacts to Executive Order on Ticket Scalping
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