Yeah that’s generally what would happen. If all that’s required is a QR code, then essentially you can stick it on a mars bar and still scan it.
but once it scans once, it shouldn’t work again, hence why if that guys mum showed up later and someone earlier used that same QR code, it may not work.
But if that has been happening, then there has to be some enquiry to why people have had access to thousand of QR codes that are correct for the system getting into the game and putting them on fake tickets. Seeing as all the data from the QR codes also goes the scanning system at the stadium, it would mean it has to be someone at the ticket agency that has access to all the data.
I don’t know, I’m sceptical and don’t think it was that organised
I think just thousand of scousers bought snide tickets with QR codes that don’t work, probably all have the same code because they don’t really understand how it works. Then they got there, realised they’re not working and then kicked up a fuss outside.
If it was truly a well organised crime plan or some hacking job with genuine working QR codes coming out of a ticket agency that deals with sporting events all over, then the problems would’ve probably not just been limited to liverpool, it would’ve been Madrid fans too.