I absolutely agree.I feel like if they have been sold, but not yet accepted, you should get paid.
Put the onus on the person who bought it to go in and accept. Because ultimately you're now losing the opportunity to sell them if they don't accept it.
Just got accepted. BTW, if you use gmail with their auto-sort thing, stubhub goes to updates. Since I have notifications off for that box, I didn't see that until 12 hours after sale.
Understanding I'm making assumptions, I'll say that it appears that the only way you can confirm the transaction is to go through the desktop stubhub site and enter the email. I presume at that point, stubhub pings the buyer. Going the other route does make your tickets available to the buyer, but it probably doesn't look at all related to what they would expect since it's from some random Ticketmaster/NYCFC address.
I am guessing this means you're screwed on day of if you're out and about.