惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
V
V2EX
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
腾讯CDC
博客园 - Franky
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
Jina AI
Jina AI
GbyAI
GbyAI
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
B
Blog RSS Feed
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
The Cloudflare Blog
V
Visual Studio Blog
P
Proofpoint News Feed
博客园 - 叶小钗
L
LangChain Blog
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
Y
Y Combinator Blog
罗磊的独立博客
雷峰网
雷峰网
博客园 - 【当耐特】
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
小众软件
小众软件
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
量子位
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
D
DataBreaches.Net
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
Vercel News
Vercel News
IT之家
IT之家
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏

Rolling Stone

Nancy Sinatra Slams Trump for Sharing Frank Sinatra ‘My Way’ Video: ‘Sacrilege’ Karol G Brings J Balvin, Ryan Castro, Peso Pluma Out at Coachella, Announces Tour Long-Shelved Series ‘The Savant’ Finally Arriving on Apple TV This Summer F1 Star Charles Leclerc Flaunts ‘Track-to-Street’ Style In New Nahmias x PUMA Campaign ‘Nine Inch Noize’ Is Trent Reznor’s EDM Victory Dance Bruce Springsteen Jammed With Patti Smith, Public Enemy, and Dr. Dre at the American Music Honors See Olivia Rodrigo Debut ‘Drop Dead’ Live During Addison Rae’s Coachella Set Inside the Twisted Life of Roald Dahl ‘The Pitt’ Star Isa Briones Is Ready to Give Her Stethoscope a Break How Iranians View the War: ‘We Are All Exhausted’ Kacey Musgraves Takes Coachella to the ‘Middle of Nowhere’ with First Set in Seven Years V: ‘I Gave My All to Create This Album’ Tory Lanez Sues California Prison System for $100 Million Over Stabbing Trump Signs Executive Order to Expedite Testing of Psychedelics Use to Combat PTSD Dante Spinetta’s New Album Is About ‘When Life Vanquishes Chaos’ Where to Watch WWE Wrestlemania 42 Online Man Accused of Killing Jam Master Jay Considers Guilty Plea: Report D4vd Arrested After a Seven-Month Investigation: How We Got Here Miley Cyrus Taps Former ‘Hannah Montana’ Impersonator, Lainey Wilson, for ‘Younger You’ Olivia Rodrigo, Tom Waits, Tyla, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week Kanye West’s Poland Concert Canceled in Latest Setback to European Tour Jack White Wore Rock & Roll Boots He Helped Design During His Surprise Coachella Set Vincent Neil Emerson on What Steve Earle Told Him About His Songs María Zardoya’s Not for Radio Drops Spring-Ready EP ‘Bloom’ Don Schlitz, Songwriter of Kenny Rogers’ ‘The Gambler,’ Dead at 73 Frank Zappa Estate Revives Vaulternative Records for Unreleased 1966 Studio Session Record Store Day 2026: The 25 Best Exclusives How to Watch ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ Season 18 Finale Online Sombr Reflects on an Improbable Relationship in Expressive Single ‘Potential’ Demi Lovato Finds Her Groove in Sultry Single ‘Low Rise Jeans’ Olivia Rodrigo References the Cure, Falls Hard on New Single ‘Drop Dead’ Tyla and Zara Larsson Channel Britney Spears in New Song ‘She Did It Again’ ‘Mandalorian & Grogu’ Battle Imperial Warlords in New Film Trailer Singer D4vd Arrested for Murder of Celeste Rivas Hernandez After Body Found in Tesla Meghan Trainor Cancels Entire Headlining Tour: ‘The Right Decision for My Family and Me’ Alex Cooper to Make Acting Debut in Colleen Hoover’s ‘Verity’ Adaptation G. Love Lost $440,000 in Bitcoin to Scammer: ‘Getting Robbed Is No Joke’ Here’s Where You Can Still Find Rüfüs Du Sol Tickets I Led the DOJ’s Antitrust Division. ‘David Beat Goliath’ in the Live Nation Case Rom-Coms Make Money. Why Is Hollywood So Afraid to Put Them in Theaters? You Can Now Drink Lagunitas on Tap at Home With Their New Pinter Collab Maverick Returns: Tom Cruise Confirmed for ‘Top Gun 3’ The Supreme Court Is Functioning Better Than You Think Avril Lavigne Covers Alanis Morissette’s ‘Ironic’ for Rom-Com Soundtrack Inside Lip Critic’s Wild, Chaotic Theft Saga Shows Clavicular Says He’s Quitting ‘Substances’ ‘Hopefully Forever’ After Suspected Overdose Tom Waits’ First New Music in 15 Years Is a Chilling, Macabre Protest Song Can America’s Working Class Organize Before AI Crushes It? Suga: ‘I’m a Good Fit for This Job’ Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert Take Aim at J.D. Vance’s ‘Rough Week’ Aaron Carter’s Mom Launches GoFundMe to Get Him a Hollywood Walk of Fame Star ‘Not a PR Stunt’: Alex Cooper and Alix Earle Feud Escalates as Brianna LaPaglia Enters the Chat Ariana Grande and Ben Stiller Face Off in Chaotic New ‘Focker In-Law’ Trailer Gloria Trevi Can Use Mexican Courts to Build Defense in Sex Cult Case. Her Detractors are Worried Pokémon Turns 30 With a Limited-Edition Target Collab Fronted by Joe Jonas Kiss’ Paul Stanley Touts New Avatar Spectacular in Vegas as More Interactive ‘Antithesis’ of the Sphere An AI-Generated Val Kilmer Stars in Unsettling ‘As Deep as the Grave’ Trailer Troubled Rock the Country Tour Is Slashing Prices, Losing Jelly Roll at One Stop Megan Thee Stallion and Walmart Drop Second Swimwear Line Designed to Fit Every ‘Body-Ody-Ody-Ody’ Apple AirPods Max 2 Review: A Small Update to Already Great Headphones Britney Spears Voluntarily Checks Into Rehab Facility Vintage Justin Bieber Merch Selling Fast Online On Heels of Singer’s Nostalgia-Fueled Coachella Set David Byrne Took Us Home Where ‘Life During Wartime’ Is Bleak, But Coachella Set Offered Hope Asha Bhosle, Legendary Bollywood Singer, Dead at 92 See Geese Cover Justin Bieber’s ‘Baby’ at Coachella Where to Watch ‘Euphoria’ Season 3 Online No Doubt Guitarist Tom Dumont Reveals Early Onset Parkinson’s Disease Diagnosis The Best Movie Karaoke Scenes, Ranked Martha Kelly Is the ‘Euphoria’ Villain the Internet Loves to Fear Donald Trump’s Incompetence Is Costing Him the Country Justin Bieber Draws Massive Crowd for Messy, ‘Swag’-Heavy Set at Coachella PinkPantheress Threw the Hottest Party in the Coachella Valley Justin Bieber Brings Out the Kid Laroi, Dijon at Coachella 2026 ‘SNL’: Watch Anitta Perform ‘Choka Choka,’ ‘Várias Quejas’ ‘SNL’: Profound Astronaut Perturbed By Rogue Pringles Can, Colleague’s Penis Problem ‘SNL’ Weekend Update Roasts JD Vance for Failed Iran Deal, ‘Weird’ Wife Comments Nine Inch Noize Performed a Full Set for the First Time at Coachella ‘SNL’ Cold Open: Trump Rips ‘Insane’ Melania for Surprise Epstein Speech Sombr Rocks Coachella in Lace and Leather With Help From Billy Corgan Addison Rae Gets Coachella Screaming With Thrilling Set Jack White Tears Through a Hit-Laden Last-Minute Set at Coachella Alabama Shakes Tackle These Crazy Times on New Song ‘American Dream’ Backstage With Coachella’s YouTube Photo Studio Veterans Are Facing a Housing Crisis. Trump Is Making It Worse Turnstile Open Coachella Set With Video of Brendan Yates’ Father Following Murder Attempt Sabrina Carpenter Wraps Coachella Around Her Finger With Hollywood-Ready Headlining Set Katseye Make Coachella Debut Without Manon But Promise ‘Many More’ Appearances Jay Weinberg on His Exit From Slipknot: ‘Maybe I Became a Scapegoat’ Anyma’s Late-Night Coachella Set Canceled Due to ‘Strong Winds’ Karol G to Be Featured In Two-Part ‘Call Her Daddy’ Episode Backstreet Boys’ Ex Manager Admits to Undermining Band to Help ‘NSYNC: ‘I’m Going to Turn All My Guns Against You’ David Lee Roth, Joe Jonas, Vanessa Carlton Join Teddy Swims at Coachella 2026 Bini Become First Filipino Group to Perform at Coachella 2026 Cardi B Wants Blogger Tasha K to Face ‘Economically Painful’ Sanctions for ‘Relentless’ Harassment Zac Brown Wakes Artemis II Crew in Space With Song ‘Free’ How to Buy BTS World Tour Tickets Online (Even for Sold Out Shows) Where to Buy Tickets to Paul Simon’s A Quiet Celebration Tour Julieta Venegas and Yahritza y Su Esencia Detail Pain of Deportation, Family Separation on ‘La Línea’ Where to Buy Tickets to the 2026 ACM Awards Here’s Where You Can Still Find Lollapalooza Tickets
Everything to Know About the Live Nation Verdict, What It Means for Fans, and What’s Next
Jon Blistein · 2026-04-17 · via Rolling Stone

Live Nation Trial

The landmark decision could reshape the live entertainment industry, but a lot has to happen first

Big changes could be coming to the concert and live entertainment industry. On Wednesday, a jury found Live Nation and Ticketmaster liable for operating as a monopoly, marking one of the most significant antitrust decisions in recent memory. 

Originally sued by the Department of Justice in 2024 (with nearly 40 states, plus Washington D.C., signing on as co-plaintiffs at the time), Live Nation was accused of exerting outsized influence over the live entertainment industry thanks to dominant positions in ticketing, promotions, and venues. For instance, the jury heard testimony that Live Nation threatened to withhold lucrative concerts from large venues that did not sign exclusive deals with Ticketmaster; and that artists who wanted to play Live Nation-owned amphitheaters also had to use the company as a promoter. 

Lawyers for Live Nation countered that the company had succeeded on its own merits. Live Nation’s multi-pronged business model, they claimed, was no different from that of its competitors, and its success was predicated on offering the best quality product and services to artists, fans, and venue owners. 

The jury ultimately ruled against Live Nation, but how exactly this decision will affect the real world remains unclear. The judge overseeing the case still needs to decide remedies, and Live Nation has confirmed it will appeal. Still, a landmark decision is a landmark decision — here’s a complete guide to everything that happened, and what comes next.

Just how big a win was this?

Enormous. The jury decided overwhelmingly against Live Nation, with a checkmark sitting next to every “Yes” box on the 10-page verdict form. As Jeffrey Kessler, the lawyer who took over the case as lead counsel after the DOJ settled mid-trial, told Rolling Stone, “There are lots of ways we could have had less than a total victory, but this was a total victory.” 

What exactly were Live Nation and Ticketmaster found liable for?

The main charges essentially boiled down to whether or not Live Nation and Ticketmaster had monopoly power over various facets of the industry, like the primary ticketing market for major concert venues, or the large amphitheater market. The jury also affirmed the states’ “tying” claim, where they alleged that Live Nation “unlawfully tied artist promotion services” to use of its amphitheaters. 

Editor’s picks

The jury further found that Live Nation “engaged in unlawful conduct that harmed competition” in each of the 33 co-plaintiff states, plus D.C. And that the company violated a handful of states’ individual antitrust or fair business practices laws. 

That sounds pretty heavy. What’s the punishment?

That has yet to be decided, and we won’t know anytime soon. Judge Arun Subramanian will determine remedies at a second set of proceedings, but it’s unclear when those will take place. As Kessler explained, the states will spend the next few months working together, and with experts, to figure out a proposal, which they’ll then present to the court. 

Broadly speaking, the states could ask for any number of remedies, including breaking up Live Nation and Ticketmaster, or forcing Live Nation to divest from other assets (such as some of its venues). There will also likely be significant monetary damages.

How significant?

One thing the jury was asked to decide was whether Ticketmaster used its alleged monopoly power to overcharge fans for tickets. They said “yes,” and agreed with the assessment that the average overcharge came to $1.72 per ticket. That figure will serve as Subramanian’s basis for determining damages. Obviously, $1.72 isn’t much in and of itself, but multiplied over potentially millions of tickets, across more than 30 states, that number could easily reach hundreds of millions of dollars, if not more. 

Related Content

What does the verdict mean for that DOJ settlement from a few weeks back? 

That proposed deal (which six of the original co-plaintiff states signed onto) still needs approval from Judge Subramanian. He’s set to review the settlement, and make sure it was made in the public interest, under a law known as the Tunney Act. As Kessler noted, Subramanian has asked the states, Live Nation, and the DOJ to get together to propose a schedule that incorporates both remedies hearings and the Tunney Act review since “those issues are related to each other.” 

Well, just how “in the public interest” was that original settlement?

That’s for Judge Subramanian to decide, but the proposal has had many critics. Yes, Live Nation did agree to some concessions: Ticketmaster, for instance, said it would cap its exclusivity contracts with venues at four years, and offer concert venues the opportunity to choose either exclusive or non-exclusive arrangements. They also said they would cap service fees at 15 percent at all Live Nation-owned amphitheaters, and divest from exclusive booking arrangements at 13 amphitheaters that Live Nation does not own. 

But many argued the deal did not go far enough, including the state AGs who continued the case, politicians, Live Nation and Ticketmaster competitors, and industry trade groups like the National Independent Venue Association. Speaking with Rolling Stone after the settlement was announced, Sen. Amy Klobuchar said, “Every time a Justice Department or an administration has done something like this, [the company has] gotten around it and grown even bigger. The only way to see a future for competition in ticketing, venues, and promotion would be breaking them up.” 

Didn’t Klobuchar and a few other senators just ask the judge to look into the settlement?

Yes. The night before the verdict was announced, Democratic Senators Klobuchar, Elizabeth Warren, Cory Booker, Richard Blumenthal, Mazie Hirono, and Peter Welch asked Subramanian to “closely scrutinize” the deal. They cited recent reports that suggested the settlement was “negotiated under suspicious circumstances” and may have been agreed to “in response to political pressure rather than the public interest.” 

Suspicious circumstances? Political pressure? That sounds spicy!

The Live Nation case has taken on a significant political dimension, especially as the company lobbied the Trump administration over the suit. Most notably, the company retained MAGA influencer-lawyer Mike Davis, who also helped lobby the DOJ to drop its challenge to a $14 billion merger involving Hewlett Packard and Juniper Networks. According to a recent Wall Street Journal story, Trump himself intervened: After hearing about the case from prominent people, the president reportedly asked what was holding up a deal. One was eventually reached after a meeting at the White House reportedly attended by Live Nation CEO Michael Rapino, the company’s lawyers, and DOJ officials (including former Attorney General Pam Bondi).

Subramanian seemed primed to look into the settlement even before the senators submitted their letter. The judge was one of several parties (including some of the DOJ’s own trial lawyers) completely surprised by the deal. The terms were reportedly agreed to on March 5, but the court wasn’t told until March 9, a timeline Subramanian called “unacceptable.” A few days later, he issued a standard, but nevertheless pointed, order calling for “all relevant communications” pertaining to the settlement to be “retained.” 

What’s Live Nation’s next move?

Well, they confirmed their plan to appeal, meaning the case could continue for several years. They’re also hoping to win a few post-trial motions that could tweak the nature of the verdict. In a statement issued Wednesday, the company described the jury’s verdict as “not the last word,” noting there are pending motions to “determine whether the liability and damages rulings stand.” 

Live Nation has also taken issue with one of the expert witnesses called by the states. They said there’s “a pending motion to strike the damages testimony on which the jury’s award was based. The Court deferred ruling on that motion as well.” 

Trending Stories

So what does all this mean for fans? Or artists? Or independent venue owners or promoters?

Those are potentially multibillion dollar questions that, unfortunately, won’t be answerable until we know remedies, or if Live Nation is successful in their appeal. The landscape of the live entertainment industry could very well shift dramatically based on this ruling, but it won’t happen immediately. In other words, don’t expect those concert ticket prices to go down anytime soon.