On TechRepublic: 10 ways techs can make extra cash
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Tom Magrino, GameSpot
Posted on ZDNet News: Jul 25, 2008 5:38:47 AM

It was only a matter of time before the Scrabble-Scrabulous feud came to a head, and that breaking point has now been reached. Hasbro said today that it has filed suit in the Southern District of New York against Rajat Agarwalla, Jayant Agarwalla, and RJ Softwares, better known as the creators of the popular Facebook application Scrabulous. As part of the suit, Hasbro said that it has served Facebook with yet another take-down notice for the application due to copyright infringement.

Though the application has been available since 2006, Hasbro began its crusade to have Scrabulous removed from Facebook earlier this year. The reason for the gamemaker's sudden ire toward the application, which draws more than 500,000 daily average users, can be attributed to the launch of the official Scrabble online game through EA's Pogo.com and Facebook this month. Currently, the official Scrabble Facebook application logs just under 20,000 users globally.

"Hasbro has an obligation to act appropriately against infringement of our intellectual properties," commented Hasbro general counsel Barry Nagler. "We view the Scrabulous application as clear and blatant infringement of our Scrabble intellectual property, and we are pursuing this legal action in accordance with the interests of our shareholders, and the integrity of the Scrabble brand."

Hasbro, which signed an exclusive licensing agreement with publishing powerhouse Electronic Arts in August 2007, has begun migrating a number of its prized casual-game properties to the digital gaming sector. Most recently, EA announced this week that Operation Mania--a spin-off of the surgeon-in-training precision puzzle game--will be available through Pogo.com and at retail for the PC beginning in August for $19.95.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 62 Talkback(s)
that's where trademark comes in
The look of scrabble is more valuable than the actual play of the game from a marketing standpoint

Crossword puzzles can be copyrighted, but you can't protect the concept of them, you can only... (Read the rest)
Posted by: merc2dogs` Posted on: 08/08/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
WHAT???  Henaway | 07/25/08
Why waste money when it was just a nuisance??  wackoae | 07/25/08
Not an exact copy at all  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/25/08
Not a copy? Are you nuts?  JamesAHall | 07/25/08
Of course it's a knock-off, but it's not an exact copy  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/25/08
That's not true  JamesAHall | 07/29/08
Copyright law doesn't apply to ideas  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/29/08
Nope  dcmtr | 07/31/08
Scrabble has been around...  AtomicFusion | 07/25/08
Copyrights Are Renewable  Mark.Eichman | 07/26/08
That's not true  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/29/08
What the US Copyright Office Says  jlafitte | 08/07/08
No..  Etch44 | 08/07/08
Copyright doesn't apply - Hasbro has no case, bro  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/25/08
Copyright  kohathi | 07/25/08
14 years with optional 14-year renewal...  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/25/08
renewal is a wonderful thing  Socoling | 07/25/08
Read up on copyright history  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/29/08
assignation....  Socoling | 07/25/08
RE: Scrabble-Scrabulous standoff spells L-A-W-S-U-I-T  qwerty690 | 07/25/08
You can't copyright ideas.  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/25/08
A set of rules for a game is more than an idea once it gets published.  jk0726 | 07/26/08
No. Copyright covers wording, not ideas  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/29/08
confusing copyright, patent, and trademark  josephmartins | 08/07/08
Nope  fadzlan@... | 07/30/08
ah but lotus 123 was not the original spreadsheet  mombo | 08/07/08
Lotus 123???  The Smoking Man | 08/07/08
You're thinking of VisiCalc....  jlafitte | 08/07/08
two bites of the apple...  jlafitte | 08/07/08
RE: Scrabble-Scrabulous standoff spells L-A-W-S-U-I-T  Terrygirl | 07/25/08
the bottom line is.....  djd221 | 07/25/08
RE: Scrabble-Scrabulous standoff spells L-A-W-S-U-I-T  bill4935 | 07/25/08
And Yet...  Mark.Eichman | 07/26/08
Copyright needs to be protected by the owner  mombo | 08/07/08
Patent the Alphabet  ashworth102680 | 07/25/08
the alphabet was public domain  mombo | 08/07/08
So are words ...  The Smoking Man | 08/07/08
Next, the little geniuses can "invent" these Facebook games  Tech99_z | 07/25/08
Presentation on Copyright - Lawrence Lessig  jkantony | 07/26/08
Re: Presentation on Copyright - Lawrence Lessig  hitech_rednek | 08/07/08
70 years is too long  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/26/08
Agreed 100%  ZDNET_guest666 | 07/29/08
Disney ...  The Smoking Man | 08/07/08
RE: Scrabble-Scrabulous standoff spells L-A-W-S-U-I-T  saxmanb | 07/26/08
Why are performances "copyrighted"?  kohathi | 07/27/08
RE: Scrabble-Scrabulous standoff spells L-A-W-S-U-I-T  saxmanb | 07/27/08
RE: Scrabble-Scrabulous standoff spells L-A-W-S-U-I-T  Panda129 | 07/29/08
I agree, Hasbro has no case  rahullak@... | 07/29/08
that's where trademark comes in  merc2dogs` | 08/08/08
Not Copyright, but maybe Trademark breach  dhruva15 | 07/30/08
RE: Scrabble-Scrabulous standoff spells L-A-W-S-U-I-T  CBR1000F | 08/01/08
Just plain thievery  verelse | 08/04/08
Don't be Dumb  ericvorheese | 08/04/08
Don't be Dumber...  pmcm | 08/07/08
On Copyright and the Other Thing  tzenes | 08/04/08
Screw the customer  wystan1000 | 08/05/08
Evil Giant Coporate Copyrights  Draven35 | 08/07/08
Typically Insane Case  madrucke@... | 08/07/08
... and the winner will be ...  oldbaritone | 08/07/08
RE: Scrabble-Scrabulous standoff spells L-A-W-S-U-I-T  SphinxRising58 | 08/07/08
Well Said.  Dauplat | 08/07/08
RE: Scrabble-Scrabulous standoff spells L-A-W-S-U-I-T  The Smoking Man | 08/07/08

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Meet Doc

  • Here to help you with your Document Management Needs
  • Doc is an enigma. Born to a Russian ballerina and a German electrical engineer, he grew up in various locations in the United States. He’s seen the insides of more brands, versions, and generations of printer and printer-related hardware than almost anyone.
  • To learn more about this mysterious figure check out his blog on ZDNet and his Workspace on TechRepublic. You’ll be glad you did.
  • Produced by
    ZDNet and
advertisement
Click Here