Here's Jason's article:
April 28, 1999
Heard on the Net
Business Wire's Lawsuit Rattles Message Boards
By JASON ANDERS THE WALL STREET JOURNAL INTERACTIVE EDITION
Three online message-board users maintain that their April Fool's gag involving a phony press release was all in fun, but Business Wire isn't laughing.
The wire service filed a lawsuit Monday against Jeffrey Mitchell, William Ulrich and Janice Shell, three regulars on the Silicon Investor discussion forum. The suit alleges that the prank constituted fraud and infringement of Business Wire's trademark. The release touted Webnode, a fake company that they said planned to sell pieces of the Internet to investors.
Business Wire says Webnode was a "sham," and says the three used the service to "publicize a phony investment opportunity." Business Wire's lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, also alleges breach of contract, defamation and conspiracy.
The lawsuit drew a quick response among message-board participants. A message board titled "Business Wire Falls for April Fools Prank" was at the top of the "hot" list Tuesday on Silicon Investor (www.techstocks.com1), which tracks the most active message boards on the service. Many postings criticized Business Wire's handling of the prank.
"I agree with the general sentiment [on the boards] that this is more bad publicity for Business Wire than anything else," says Kevin Podsiadlik, of Dallas, who uses Silicon Investor and who believes Business Wire is making too much out of a harmless joke.
Business Wire is one of the most popular services for the distribution of company press releases. The service's reach to individual investors has grown significantly in recent years, partly because of the Internet. Its press releases are provided on popular investing sites, including Yahoo! Finance (quote.yahoo.com3).
"A joke is one thing, but they've gone beyond the boundaries of what is a joke. It's now April 27, and they're continuing their joke," says Cathy Baron Tamraz, an executive vice president of Business Wire. "They think they're very funny. We don't." She says legal action could have been avoided had the group not continued to mock the service in recent weeks.
The three defendants have been vocal in their criticism of Business Wire, lampooning the service -- with the help of other users -- on Silicon Investor. On April 18 they posted a "retraction" on the Webnode site, apologizing for infringing on Business Wire's trademark and promising not to use the name anymore. The retraction mentioned Business Wire 44 times. "We also agree to cease, desist, and refrain from using either the word Business or Wire in any future Webnode press releases," the retraction said.
"This whole thing is ridiculous," says Ms. Shell, an art historian in Milan, Italy, who is one of the lawsuit's defendants. "It's extremely disingenuous of these guys not to mention that this evil hoax was an April Fool's joke. They're trying to leave the impression that we're trying to scam people," she says in reference to a statement Business Wire released about its suit.
The Webnode prank was centered on the notion that people could buy pieces of the Next Generation Internet -- which is an actual project -- and then collect usage fees for the data that would flow across their chunks of the Net. Webnode claimed it had a contract with the U.S. Department of Energy that permitted it to sell the segments of the new Internet.
The three created a fake Web site (www.webnode.com4) and invited prospective investors to fill out a form indicating their interest in the venture and providing their names and e-mail addresses. But the pranksters say they only did that to make the site appear more realistic -- and hoodwink more people (indeed, they claim thousands of people filled out the form). They say they didn't collect any money, nor did they ask for any.
The group managed to trick at least one news source. Wired ran a brief story on its Web site (www.wired.com5) on April 1 detailing Webnode's plan. The next day, the service ran a correction that said the story wasn't true, and said, "Wired News congratulations the pranksters and regrets being suckered into it on as obvious a day as April 1."
The pranksters are well-known on Silicon Investor, where they have a large following and an equally large group of critics. They spend much of their time using the message boards to ferret out what they believe are investment scams.
"We do these things obviously to have fun, but also in the hope to educate investors about the dangers of scam artists and hypesters. And they sue us over this?" says Ms. Shell. She has had several message boards created on the service in her honor, including a recent addition, "The Janice Shell Legal Defense Fund."
Messrs. Mitchell and Ulrich say they haven't been served with the lawsuit yet, but plan on fighting it.
William Marames, an attorney in Washington, D.C., who specializes in trademark cases, says the pranksters could run into trouble if they use parody as a defense, since the parody wasn't actually aimed at Business Wire. But he said it could be difficult for Business Wire to win any monetary damages for trademark infringement, since the service would have to prove that either Webnode stole away business -- acting somehow as a competitor -- or that the prank scared away customers.
Several of the group's supporters on Silicon Investor have pointed out that fraudulent companies have sometimes used Business Wire -- and other services -- to distribute information about themselves.
Ms. Tamraz, the Business Wire executive, says there probably have been cases where companies have distributed false information through the service. But she says Business Wire doesn't have the ability to investigate every claim made in every release, and says when the service has reason to believe false statements are being made -- as it did in this case -- it takes action. "There's nothing of this magnitude that we've dealt with before," she says.
What's more, she says several people -- including users of Silicon Investor -- have sent electronic mail to Business Wire expressing their support for its lawsuit. "People agree with us that this isn't good for investors. There is this idea that you can say whatever you want to on the Web, and it's just not true," she says.
This isn't the first April Fool's prank the defendants have pulled. Last year, the trio set up a Web site for another phony company, FBN Associates, that supposedly had several miracle cures for the year-2000 problem (including a modified Timex wristwatch that could detect noncompliant computers just by being worn near them). The group concocted fake press releases for that prank, too -- including one announcing the products had received a blessing from the pope -- but didn't distribute the releases on Business Wire.
Still, the group says the suit won't damp any of its April Fool's fun for next year. "We probably won't use Business Wire again, though," says Mr. Ulrich.
URL for this Article: interactive.wsj.com. |