Here is an article on Hunahpu's day ticket scalping written in January:
http://www.tampabay.com/things-to-d...s-out-becomes-hot-ticket-for-scalpers/2163403. If a few scalpers really sold 3000 or more tickets at a rate of double to triple the price, then they made, altogether, $300000 to $450000.
Here is another article on Eventbrite scanning of tickets:
http://help.eventbrite.com/customer/portal/articles/428823-iphone-for-check-in-with-entry-manager. This seems to indicate Eventbrite
provides the capability to identify duplicate tickets. I'd presume this was functional that day unless there's some means of turning that off (and I have zero ******* clue why anyone would ever do that).
Since the scanners can identify duplicate tickets, all of the nonsense from Sat. could have been avoided by using the barcode scanner the entire time rather than deciding to stop using it. If a lot of people with scalped tickets didn't get in as a result, that's their dumb fault for buying a ticket from a scalper in the first place. However, by CCB throwing out their scanning system, they themselves took full responsibility for allowing hoards of people with fake tickets into their event, and probably helped scalpers make a **** ton of money.
While I strongly disagree with them passing the blame onto their customers, and with the decision to abandon their festival, I do agree with seeing Hunaphu's get distributed. At some point, you make enough of a beer that it get's
ridiculous to distribute it at a festival. They can BOTH have a festival (without the bottle release) and distribute the bottles. It's not an either/or situation.
I wish most beer releases would be kept separate from beer festivals. It's rare to not have a shitshow when the two are mixed together.