104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
HB2782

 

Introduced 2/6/2025, by Rep. Hoan Huynh

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Prohibition on Automated Online Ticket Purchasing Act. Provides that a person may not use or create any automated software program that performs automatic and repetitive tasks and is designed to impersonate or replicate human activity online to: (1) purchase tickets in excess of posted limits for an online ticket sale; (2) use multiple Internet protocol addresses, multiple purchaser accounts, or multiple e-mail addresses to purchase tickets in excess of posted limits for an online ticket sale; or (3) circumvent or disable an electronic queue, waiting period, presale code, or other sales volume limitation system associated with an online ticket sale. Provides that an owner or operator of a place of entertainment that sells tickets to events, and any agent who conducts or facilitates those sales, shall report to the Attorney General any incidents that violates the prohibition on using a bot to purchase tickets, of which the owner, operator, or agent has actual knowledge, within a reasonable period of time after the incident is discovered by the owner, operator, or agent, and in no case later than 30 days after the incident is discovered. Provides that the Attorney General may seek injunctive relief in response to violations of the Act. Provides for civil penalties for violations of the Act.


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A BILL FOR

 

HB2782LRB104 09645 SPS 19711 b

1    AN ACT concerning business.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Prohibition on Automated Online Ticket Purchasing Act.
 
6    Section 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
7    "Bot" means any automated software program that performs
8automatic and repetitive tasks and is designed to impersonate
9or replicate human activity online. "Bot" does not include
10auto fill or password management features built into an
11Internet browser or provided through separate software.
12    "Event" means a concert, theatrical performance, sporting
13event, exhibition, show, or similar scheduled activity that:
14        (1) is open to the public;
15        (2) is held in a public or private venue; and
16        (3) requires payment of an admission fee to attend the
17    activity.
18    "Ticket" means a physical or electronic certificate,
19voucher, document, token, or other evidence of a right for
20admission to enter a place of entertainment for one or more
21events at one or more specified dates and times.
 
22    Section 10. Prohibition on automated online ticket

 

 

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1purchasing.
2    (a) A person may not use or create a bot to:
3        (1) purchase tickets in excess of posted limits for an
4    online ticket sale;
5        (2) use multiple Internet protocol addresses, multiple
6    purchaser accounts, or multiple e-mail addresses to
7    purchase tickets in excess of posted limits for an online
8    ticket sale; or
9        (3) circumvent or disable an electronic queue, waiting
10    period, presale code, or other sales volume limitation
11    system associated with an online ticket sale.
12    (b) An owner or operator of a place of entertainment that
13sells tickets to events, and any agent who conducts or
14facilitates those sales, shall report to the Attorney General
15any incidents that violate subsection (a), of which the owner,
16operator, or agent has actual knowledge, within a reasonable
17period of time after the incident is discovered by the owner,
18operator, or agent, and in no case later than 30 days after the
19incident is discovered.
 
20    Section 15. Enforcement by Attorney General.
21    (a) The Attorney General may investigate a claim that a
22person violated this Act.
23    (b) If the Attorney General concludes that a person is
24violating this Act, the Attorney General may bring an action
25in the name of the People of the State to restrain or enjoin

 

 

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1the person from violating this Act.
2    (c) In addition to bringing an action for injunctive
3relief under this Act, the Attorney General may seek
4restitution and petition a circuit court for the assessment of
5a civil penalty as provided by this Section.
6    (d) A person who knowingly violates Section 10 is liable
7for a civil penalty of not more than $10,000 for each
8violation.
9    (e) Every ticket transaction in which a ticket is acquired
10to be sold in violation of Section 10 constitutes a separate
11violation for purposes of assessing a civil penalty.
12    (f) The civil penalty for a violation of a court order or
13injunction issued to enforce this Act may not exceed $100,000.
14    (g) The Attorney General may recover all reasonable costs
15of bringing an action under this Section, including court
16costs, reasonable attorneys' fees, and investigation costs.