Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve traveled all over the world and in many underdeveloped countries.
I have never encountered so much scamming as I did in Poland.
They scammed us by renting out an apartment on Booking.com full of bed bugs and no access to kitchen.
Taxi driver scammed us by dropping us off at a wrong location and telling us our destination is around the corner.
We almost got scammed with Taylor Swift concert tickets too. There was at least a hundred of people who bought tickets on Stubhub and although their names were on the tickets , the name inside QR code didn’t match and they would not let them in.
We got lucky by chance. They denied us the first time, but we tried again and they didn’t check our names the second time. Stubhub is going to be so screwed by Polish concerts.
I’m never coming back. I thought it was a developed European country because they are part of EU. Wrong.
That sounds like a stubhub problem. The should go under because the ticketmaster business model makes theirs unsustainable. The whole premise of stubhub is a reliable secondary market, but ticketmaster won't let them act as a middle man, so the reliable part isn't there
It’s also not a scam. A scam is never getting tickets or getting fake tickets. OP’s seller forgot or neglected to change the name of the ticket to hers. Some attendants check, most don’t- she got in with the ticket with an attendant who didn’t check so she was NOT scammed.
It's not a scam, it's a weakness of stubhub not being an official reseller. Things like this happen all the time because stubhub never takes possession of the tickets and has no independent ability to live up to any of their guarantees.
Ok, but, like everything else OP attributes to being a scam, it was not a scam. The tickets were valid!
Anonymous wrote:Again, OP is an insufferable turd giving Americans a bad name. The Polish scammers are only giving him a taste of his own medicine.
Read all about this male Karen in todays Daily Mail
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You booked accommodation on Airbnb, a site with no quality control.
You took a taxi without looking at your destination on a map. (Too cheap to pay for a data plan?)
You booked tickets on Stubhub, a site with no quality control. (Sensing a pattern here.)
Op, POLAND is not your problem. If you’re going through life with a due diligence strategy of “Other people are responsible for giving me what I want,” then what you get is… this. This is all on you, ducky.
Actually,
1. I do have a data plan on my phone. It didn’t occur to me that I needed to micromanage the taxi driver.
2. Stubhub has very good customer service. They issued us another set of tickets after I complained.
We ended up seating in our original seats. They were legit. It was some bs Polish bureaucracy.
Also, forgot to mention, all the guide tours we had were really bad. Don’t hire tours, do it yourself with audio guides.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve traveled all over the world and in many underdeveloped countries.
I have never encountered so much scamming as I did in Poland.
They scammed us by renting out an apartment on Booking.com full of bed bugs and no access to kitchen.
Taxi driver scammed us by dropping us off at a wrong location and telling us our destination is around the corner.
We almost got scammed with Taylor Swift concert tickets too. There was at least a hundred of people who bought tickets on Stubhub and although their names were on the tickets , the name inside QR code didn’t match and they would not let them in.
We got lucky by chance. They denied us the first time, but we tried again and they didn’t check our names the second time. Stubhub is going to be so screwed by Polish concerts.
I’m never coming back. I thought it was a developed European country because they are part of EU. Wrong.
That sounds like a stubhub problem. The should go under because the ticketmaster business model makes theirs unsustainable. The whole premise of stubhub is a reliable secondary market, but ticketmaster won't let them act as a middle man, so the reliable part isn't there
It’s also not a scam. A scam is never getting tickets or getting fake tickets. OP’s seller forgot or neglected to change the name of the ticket to hers. Some attendants check, most don’t- she got in with the ticket with an attendant who didn’t check so she was NOT scammed.
It's not a scam, it's a weakness of stubhub not being an official reseller. Things like this happen all the time because stubhub never takes possession of the tickets and has no independent ability to live up to any of their guarantees.
Anonymous wrote:You booked accommodation on Airbnb, a site with no quality control.
You took a taxi without looking at your destination on a map. (Too cheap to pay for a data plan?)
You booked tickets on Stubhub, a site with no quality control. (Sensing a pattern here.)
Op, POLAND is not your problem. If you’re going through life with a due diligence strategy of “Other people are responsible for giving me what I want,” then what you get is… this. This is all on you, ducky.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve traveled all over the world and in many underdeveloped countries.
I have never encountered so much scamming as I did in Poland.
They scammed us by renting out an apartment on Booking.com full of bed bugs and no access to kitchen.
Taxi driver scammed us by dropping us off at a wrong location and telling us our destination is around the corner.
We almost got scammed with Taylor Swift concert tickets too. There was at least a hundred of people who bought tickets on Stubhub and although their names were on the tickets , the name inside QR code didn’t match and they would not let them in.
We got lucky by chance. They denied us the first time, but we tried again and they didn’t check our names the second time. Stubhub is going to be so screwed by Polish concerts.
I’m never coming back. I thought it was a developed European country because they are part of EU. Wrong.
That sounds like a stubhub problem. The should go under because the ticketmaster business model makes theirs unsustainable. The whole premise of stubhub is a reliable secondary market, but ticketmaster won't let them act as a middle man, so the reliable part isn't there
It’s also not a scam. A scam is never getting tickets or getting fake tickets. OP’s seller forgot or neglected to change the name of the ticket to hers. Some attendants check, most don’t- she got in with the ticket with an attendant who didn’t check so she was NOT scammed.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know why everyone is so harsh to OP. I travel a decent amount, a few countries a year, and use booking.com all the time, so I wouldn't consider than an amatuer mistake. (I admit I usually use it for hotels but once for an apt but that apt was very nice).
And the cab thing happens all over, but again, you usually CAN just trust a driver to take you where you need to go on an agreed-upon or metered price.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know why everyone is so harsh to OP. I travel a decent amount, a few countries a year, and use booking.com all the time, so I wouldn't consider than an amatuer mistake. (I admit I usually use it for hotels but once for an apt but that apt was very nice).
And the cab thing happens all over, but again, you usually CAN just trust a driver to take you where you need to go on an agreed-upon or metered price.