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FatWallet To Sue Best Buy Over DMCA Threat

jkeyes writes "Online deal site FatWallet announced today that they will be suing Best Buy and other companies that sent them DMCA takedown notices. They are seeking a declaration from the court stating that Best Buy and other companies' demands were an abuse of the DMCA, and also violate the 1st Amendment." We covered Best Buy's original DMCA invocation a few days back.

27 of 263 comments (clear)

  1. Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I wonder if they've got a good deal on a lawyer?

  2. Good. by Selecter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Its about time somebody didnt just roll over and play dead. Sic em.

  3. Not the first time! by anaphora · · Score: 5, Informative

    This isn't the first time FatWallet.com has stood up to DCMA-pushers.

  4. Oh boy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Now when I wear my fatwallet tshit in line at bestbuy at 2am on Friday I might be recieved with less than open arms, and miss out on my $11 Microwave.

  5. Truly... by scifience · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since when is posting an ad flyer online illegal? If it is, TechTV should get sued also for showing their "Real Deal" segment every Monday in which they compare Sunday ad flyers. My guess is that they are just going after the "little guys" hoping that they will just give in and not fight.

    1. Re:Truly... by SophtwareSlump · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I'm guessing that Best Buy is going after FatWallet this year (last year it was Wal-Mart) since most of the 'Black Friday' specials are loss leaders. You know get people in the door with a cheap digital camera and hope they need to buy some batteries, a USB cable, a CompactFlash card and the 4 year protection plan. I'd like to think the people that read FatWallet aren't going to buy the accesories on an impulse if they can get them cheaper elsewhere.

      I still don't understand what the big fuss is because there's always limtied quantities of the really good deals. You can't get a raincheck and you have to deal with the masses. Does Best Buy really care if they sell out of something 5 minutes after doors open, instead of 10? Are they trying to intentionally alienate their customers? Do they think people sharing information on the Internet is going to go away?

      I've looked at most of the ads for Friday already via links on Anandtech forums and the only remotely 'great' deal is at Office Depot for a Lite-On dual format DVD burner for $89 out the door. Or $79 if you price match it to Best Buy ;)

    2. Re:Truly... by merdaccia · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's all about expectations. Right now, people expect Best Buy, etc. to have great deals on Black Friday. People are waiting in anticipation, people will line up, and Best Buy will sell hordes of crap from people thinking they're gonna get good deals.

      But then FatWallet (thanks FatWallet) comes along, and lists what these deals are. After people see what's really on sale, a lot of people will lose interest because the sales aren't great (as you said, "the only remotely great deal is"). Consumers have time to see whether something is really a deal or not by comparing prices in advance. This results in a lot less people expecting good deals, and a lot less people going to Best Buy on Black Friday. And a lot less money for Best Buy. Hence, the takedown notices. They know they'll lose money if people see the hype for what it really is ... hype.

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      *blinking cursor*

  6. My Expert Analysis by xintegerx · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think they like each other. You know how someone likes each other, and starts passing notes back and forth? Secretly liking each other? That is what is going on here.

    They are crying in the back seat of a car, for their mommy to come forward and slap them around a bit. The solution, as it is in all families in these cases, is to make the two hand their stuff back to each other and shut up. If I was the father in this family, I would rename these crybabies: Best Buy wants the name FatWallet and FatWallet would be more appropriately named Best Buy.

    There I fixed everything.

  7. Restoring people's faith by BlackSabbath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This decision will be interesting as many people have lost faith in the "system" thinking that laws are made by and for those with money.

    A good decision here could go a way to help restoring people's faith in the law.

    Of course a bad decision will confirm everybody's worst fears.

    1. Re:Restoring people's faith by danheskett · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Courts aren't in the business of restoring peoples faith in hte law. And they are not in the business in picking which laws are good or bad. Courts are in the business of ruling on how laws should be applied, which laws conflict with each other, and which laws are not enforceable.

      A good decision here could go a way to help restoring people's faith in the law.
      In my book, a good decision is a ruling rooted only in the law. In a lot of /. opinion, a good opinion is one that is what they want to hear to promote their agenda.

      Of course a bad decision will confirm everybody's worst fears.
      The worst fear beaing that the laws are made by and for those with money? If you think that is the case then your beef is with Congress.

      Let me ask you this, to kinda of solidfy my kind of meandering point:

      If Congress passes a law with the purpose of enriching the powerful and wealthy at the expense of the little guy, would a court ruling that enforces this law and bilks the little guy out of money bve a good ruling or a bad ruling?

      Around here, the expectation is that it would be a bad ruling, regardless of how the ruling adheres to the written law. In my book, that ruling would be a good ruling.

      My hope with this whole DMCA case is that the court follows the word of the law exactly. And in the future, I hope courts fully enforce every aspect of the DMCA, so that in the future, I can go to my congress person and use it as Exhibit A. I've gone to my people in Congress, and talked to them, and you know what? In every case they want examples of how the DMCA has been abused and how courts ruled.

      The bottom line here is that a good and a bad ruling are really interesting questions.

    2. Re:Restoring people's faith by TyrranzzX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And I, and millions of others, have written letters to congresspersons, only to get predigested letters back stating "everything is ok, please vote for me".

      I could garountee you that if you sat me down infront of the senate and asked me to explain to them why the DMCA is bad I could convince them within an hour as could just about any well educated technically inclined individual could.

      To put it bluntly, when your ruling body passes laws that creat more conflicts than they solve, that is a bad ruling body. Much of the time this isn't due to people saying "hahahaaa, we'll get you and your dog too!" but more along the lines of most of the people in congress being traditonally educated buisnesspeople with plenty of education in other areas who, imo, trust corperations too much.

      So, what I really thing has gone on is a fundemental change since the past. Corperations began creating all the resources we had and after a few generations, the old guys who said "corperations are bad, we must regulate this tool lest it gets out of control" died off to leave new people to come in and get elected. The new people had more faith in the corperate system than they did before, and as time went on, congress simply became more corperate friendly without realizing the folly of this, which is that if you give corperations all the power they want, and let them have flawed leaders, you unbalance the power system (such as competition) that keeps the peasants happy. When this happens guys at the top get greedy, and they'll conspire with their friends to force the mark of the beast onto us as an example and force us into slavery.

      Add to this bribery, er, lobbying and you've got a corrupt goverment. With every law nobody agree's with, respect for all law by this goverment will decrease until there is no law.

      The measure of a goverments success, in any incarnation, is it's ability to solve conflicts between people. A good decision would solve the majority of conflicts, while a bad decision would solve the minorty of them and a really bad decision would cause even more conflicts.

  8. It's fair use by tepples · · Score: 5, Informative

    Since when is posting an ad flyer online illegal?

    Ad flyers are copyrighted. However, posting excerpts therefrom should count as news reporting, giving it a boost under the fair use criteria (17 USC 107). Heck, I'd guess that the prices themselves are facts or ideas and therefore subject to the exclusion of copyright on ideas (17 USC 102). You're right as far as I can tell.

  9. Goatse.cx webmaster to sue for DCMA violations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny
    I'm surprised he hasn't sued everybody under the sun. The goatse man has been posted and altered everywhere on the Internet now.

  10. SAY NO TO DMCA Abuse by tonyz2k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It seems like the DMCA is a card often played by large technology-oriented companies. Its time for Fat Wallet, and Slick Deals and the rest of them to fight for what they believe in. After all it is america and they need stick it to Best Buy and these other tools who insist on using the DMCA. I mean seriously this DMCA shit has got to stop, first kevin mitnick, then that kid from northern europe with his DVD stuff, that russian kid for his adobe font stuff, whats next, are the Creators of Linux going to jail for using code from the Windows TCP/IP stack!? Wheres the DMCA Sux tshirt when you need it. Think Geek, make that and also a bumper sticker, I'll wear it down in DC and show the Senator Hatches whats what!

    --
    click here to incinerate homeless people
  11. Going up against the Best Buy legal team???! by Y-Crate · · Score: 5, Funny

    I certainly hope they have a fat wall....er....nevermind.

  12. Thank WallMart et al. by shis-ka-bob · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I didn't know about FatWallet until I read this story. This site seems like a useful way to find good deals. Sometimes, a lawsuit is better than advertising.

    --
    Think global, act loco
    1. Re:Thank WallMart et al. by Slack3r78 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I've never cared for Fat Wallet's layout, and as such, spend a lot of time lurking in Anandtech's Hot Deals forum. Basically, if there's a deal on anything computer-related going down, you can probably find it there, and most of the better deals from FW manage to drift there fairly quickly as well. =)

  13. Re:Limiting DMCA by SharpFang · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Next time somebody patents oxygen-nitrogen mix and the court will say you don't have to pay royalties for breathing air. Yeah, big win.

    Sorry, but this reminds me "victories" from state of terror. In a country where people get killed for the way they think, you're happy if you go free from prison (with barely your toenails missing) and announce everyone that after all they decided you DO have right to paint your fenceposts green.

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    45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
  14. one small step for man. one giant leap for mankind by mgoodman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    let's hope this is the first of many, so that our children don't have to deal with this nonsense.

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  15. media whores 101 by segment · · Score: 4, Interesting


    If they really gave a shit about the privacy of others etal, they would oust their logfiles entirely. Like Cryptome does, and many others do. They're not obligated to keep log files under any binding law, and now they're bitching about being targeted for user id's etc.. Here's a noble idea for those who want to protect the privacy of others ln -s /var/log/access_log /dev/null otherwise wake up and smell the coffee... You will be targeted... Some of my own logs? I parse them out, all I mainly get are gov visitors to my https://www.pol*/foia/ directories. I keep them in case some fscktard makes a move and I have to report something to an ISP, so it's a trade off for me. As for them they're not obligated to keep the logs, and they're not obligated to remove publicly posted information. What's Bestbuy going to do after, sue Google for keeping it cached... Get real

  16. Positive effect of DMCA by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Fatwallet is another cool website that I would never have heard of if it weren't for this. There's no such thing as bad publicity.

    It's like the Fox News Channel giving Al Franken's book sales a huge boost by suing the guy.

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
  17. No holds barred. by mrsam · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The linked press release includes a link to a copy of the lawsuit filing by fatwallet.com

    fatwallet.com is not just going for a declaratory judgement that these DMCA complaints are bunk. fatwallet.com's complaint also directly challenges the constitutionality of the DMCA (see paragraphs 40 and 41).

    If fatwallet.com gets lucky, there's a small chance that this lawsuit might, just might, result in the DMCA being declared unconstitutional!

  18. Re:IT'S ABOUT TIME!!! by benna · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As was explained to me by a Lawyer who worked for Congress at one time, most laws are the result of knee-jerk reactions to public/corporate demand. Unfortunately, not much thought goes into the consequences of these laws. They just want to keep their jobs.

    Another problem is that Congress makes some of these laws so vague as to leave too much interpretation up to the judges who try cases under these laws. Unfortunately, organizations such as the EFF don't have the clout or the resources that the corps do.

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  19. Impacts RIAA too... by utlemming · · Score: 5, Interesting
    If you read the legal brief (and for a pre-law student like me, it is interesting reading) the implications are far-reaching

    One of the arguments made that will impact RIAA and the MPAA is that the DCMA shifts the burden of proof of the copyright from the person claiming copyright to the person accused of violation. FatWallet claims that this violates the Due process clause gaurenteed in the Fifth Amendment -- in other words, you have to go to court to prove that you did not violate a copyright; whereas with Due Process, they would prove that you did violate the copyright Same concept as guilty until proven innocent. FatWallet is arguing for innocent until proven guilty. FatWallet also is arguing that they should be given adiquate time to notify the poster.

    The implications would be chilling for the RIAA. Why? Because instead of firing off a couple hundred law suits, they would be forced to prove to the ISP that the subject of the supeonia had in fact violated copyrights. Then your ISP would have to notify the alleged offender of copyright infringment so that they can defend themselves.

    The whole message of the legal brief is to take out the DCMA one leg at a time. First they attack the copyright that Best Buy, et al., has and then they go for Fifth Amendment issues. It is a great thing. It is just interesting that the people who used the DCMA in the wrong way to provoke a law suit is retailers trying to prevent Black-Friday prices from being let out.

    --
    The views expressed are mine own and do not express the views of my employer.
  20. Not fair use, unregulated by copyright law. by jbn-o · · Score: 4, Interesting

    However, posting excerpts therefrom should count as news reporting, giving it a boost under the fair use criteria (17 USC 107).

    No, you are incorrect. The decision in Feist says facts are not copyrightable (see the decision in section II A says "This case concerns the interaction of two well-established propositions. The first is that facts are not copyrightable; the other, that compilations of facts generally are."). This would mean we're not dealing with fair use, we're dealing with something outside of the US copyright regime. As Lawrence Lessig made quite clear in his "Free Culture" speech in 2002:

    Talking about fair use, this is not fair use; this is unregulated use. To read is not a fair use; it's an unregulated use. To give it to someone is not a fair use; it's unregulated. To sell it, to sleep on top of it, to do any of these things with this text is unregulated. Now, in the center of this unregulated use, there is a small bit of stuff regulated by the copyright law; for example, publishing the book--that's regulated. And then within this small range of things regulated by copyright law, there's this tiny band before the Internet of stuff we call fair use: Uses that otherwise would be regulated but that the law says you can engage in without the permission of anybody else. For example, quoting a text in another text--that's a copy, but it's a still fair use. That means the world was divided into three camps, not two: Unregulated uses, regulated uses that were fair use, and the quintessential copyright world. Three categories.

    So if citing facts were fair use that would mean ordinarily citing facts is regulated activity but you're allowed to do it in certain circumstances. But since we're dealing with activity not regulated by copyright law, this means fair use is not the key to understanding why we can cite the price of Best Buy's goods any time we want without first getting permission from Best Buy. This is also a very potent rationale for FatWallet against Best Buy.

  21. Not Pro Bono, and no hand out by Chief+Mucky+Muck · · Score: 5, Informative

    I can assure you that the legal fees are being paid 100% out of pocket. There is no pro bono representation this year, although we did use pro bono counsel last year.

    Many folks on FatWallet have offered financial assistance, but we are not accepting any of it. If the time were to come where additional funds would be required, we would first look to other businesses that would be benefited by the suit, and as a last resort to consumers themselves.

  22. customers by morgajel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Last year I remember hearing about this story, and sorta had a "good for them" feelgood moment.

    A year later I'm a little wiser and felt that someone should say this.

    Thank you.

    Since I don't know a whole lot about your business, I plan on checking it out and trying to become a paying customer solely because I believe you are a "good" company. I'll make sure to spread the word to my family so they can know what's going on.

    there aren't many out there with the balls to do what you do, so again, Thank you.
    -Morgajel

    --
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