Slashdot Mirror


Adware Related To Web Sites Ruled Legal

Cobb writes "The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals recently ruled that it is legal for adware programs to show you pop ups for knock-offs and rivals when you visit a companies website. 'In 1-800 Contacts's lawsuit against adware provider WhenU.com, the appeals court likened WhenU's ads to retail stores that place generic competitors next to brand-name products.'"

3 of 218 comments (clear)

  1. I Went To The Site by DanielMarkham · · Score: 5, Funny

    But it had an annoying pop-up, so I left without RTFA.

  2. Install? by Iriel · · Score: 5, Funny

    I notice that the case didn't address the legality of adware being installed without a user's full knowledge. I find it humorous, but I have an idea!

    They can inform the user that adware is being installed with a pop-up! Everybody reads pop-ups!

    --
    Perfecting Discordia
    www.stevenvansickle.com
  3. In related news, the Mafia by MobyDisk · · Score: 4, Funny

    In related news, the district court ruled that it is legal for the Mafia to use competing brands in their extortion efforts. A store owner complained that the local mafia was using Glock guns to threaten him when his store was selling Magnums. The store owner complained that it was not fair that his assailants were advertising competing products.

    The judge stated that "It does not violate trademark law to use competing products during an extortion effort." He added that this ruling does not make extortion legal, it merely states that the brand names of the products is not relevant.