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Is Gawker's "Apple Tablet Scavenger Hunt" Illegal?

theodp writes "Not too surprisingly, Apple was not amused by Valleywag's announcement of an Apple Tablet Scavenger Hunt, which offered cash prizes ranging from 10K-100K for info about the much-anticipated new Apple device. The promo prompted a threatening cease-and-desist letter from Apple's lawyers, which Valleywag deemed the most concrete evidence yet that there may indeed be a tablet in the works. But is the Scavenger Hunt really illegal, as the attorney claimed? The jury's still out, but Slate concludes Apple's got a pretty good case, although it notes that Valleywag's unconventional Scavenger Hunt 'stunt' may not really be all that different from 'reporting' practiced by mainstream publications like the WSJ."

2 of 172 comments (clear)

  1. How is this different ... by thephydes · · Score: 5, Interesting

    .... to car magazines paying a bounty for pix of yet to be released models?

  2. Re:Is putting a bounty on someone's life illegal? by maxume · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is a clause from Gawkers contest rules:

    By submitting any photo or information to Gawker Media, you hereby represent and warrant that the submitted photo or information does not and shall not infringe on any copyright, any rights of privacy or publicity of any person, or any other right of any third party, and you have the right to grant any and all rights and licenses granted to Gawker Media herein, including but not limited to all necessary rights under copyright, free and clear of any claims or encumbrances;

    That makes it pretty clear that they don't expect people to share information illegally.

    I guess everyone involved gets some publicity though.

    --
    Nerd rage is the funniest rage.